"There is no pleasure in having nothing to do; the fun is having lots to do and not doing it"
About this Quote
It reads like a joke about procrastination, but coming from Andrew Jackson it lands as something sharper: a confession that power is as much performance as it is labor. Jackson wasn’t a salon wit; he was a brawler-president who made the executive branch feel like a weapon. That’s what makes the line interesting. It’s not praising laziness. It’s praising optionality.
The first clause rejects the fantasy of pure leisure. “Nothing to do” isn’t freedom; it’s emptiness, a loss of friction. The second clause flips the knife: the “fun” comes from abundance of obligations and the ability to refuse them. That’s a very Jacksonian psychology. He thrived on conflict, deadlines, enemies, the sense of a crowded arena. In that world, not acting isn’t inertia; it’s dominance. You don’t withhold effort because you’re bored. You withhold it because you can.
As presidential subtext, it’s also a small, cynical truth about governance: the thrill often sits less in policy craftsmanship than in control of attention and timing. Jackson famously embraced the veto as a political instrument, not just a constitutional check, and cultivated an image of decisive will. The quote suggests the shadow side of that willpower: the pleasure of delaying, of letting others sweat, of choosing when not to choose.
It’s a line that flatters modern busyness while exposing its dirty secret. The point isn’t work. The point is having work hover around you like proof you matter.
The first clause rejects the fantasy of pure leisure. “Nothing to do” isn’t freedom; it’s emptiness, a loss of friction. The second clause flips the knife: the “fun” comes from abundance of obligations and the ability to refuse them. That’s a very Jacksonian psychology. He thrived on conflict, deadlines, enemies, the sense of a crowded arena. In that world, not acting isn’t inertia; it’s dominance. You don’t withhold effort because you’re bored. You withhold it because you can.
As presidential subtext, it’s also a small, cynical truth about governance: the thrill often sits less in policy craftsmanship than in control of attention and timing. Jackson famously embraced the veto as a political instrument, not just a constitutional check, and cultivated an image of decisive will. The quote suggests the shadow side of that willpower: the pleasure of delaying, of letting others sweat, of choosing when not to choose.
It’s a line that flatters modern busyness while exposing its dirty secret. The point isn’t work. The point is having work hover around you like proof you matter.
Quote Details
| Topic | Witty One-Liners |
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