Some songs don’t age. They just wait for the world to catch up.
I first heard “Another Brick in the Wall” as a teenager. It felt like rebellion. A fist raised at school, at authority, at anyone who told you to conform and comply.
Four decades later, living across seven countries and working inside some of the world’s largest organizations, I hear something completely different.
I hear a warning.
The Wall Was Never About School
Pink Floyd released The Wall in 1979. The same decade the work-life balance model was being institutionalized into corporate life. The same era that built the architecture most HR departments are still operating on today.
Another brick in the wall. Another rule. Another system that told you to leave your life at the door and show up as a professional container.
That’s the wall. Not just in schools. In every organization that ever asked a human being to split themselves in two.
👉 The wall was never a metaphor. For millions of people, it’s the daily reality of a life lived in compartments.
What the Wall Actually Built
The idea seemed rational. You have a work life and a personal life. Keep them separate. Manage the balance between them. Bring your skills. Leave your story.
But humans don’t work that way.
The person carrying financial anxiety into a Monday morning meeting is the same person you need to make a great decision at 3pm. The employee going through a relationship breakdown doesn’t leave it in the car park. The team member struggling with purpose doesn’t suddenly find it when they open a laptop.
💡 You can’t brick up half a person and expect a whole performance. The wall doesn’t protect the organization. It just hides the cost.
The Collapse Pink Floyd Predicted
“We don’t need no education.”
They weren’t rejecting learning. They were rejecting the system that mistook conformity for capability.
And now look at what’s happening on LinkedIn, the platform built for résumés is full of burnout confessions, purpose journeys, identity crises, and real life. Because people could no longer pretend the wall was real.
The wall is collapsing. Not because people became weaker. Because the pretense became unsustainable.
➜ Engagement at its lowest in a decade
➜ 37% of people who quit in 2024 left because of culture and disconnection, not pay
➜ The wall isn’t protecting anyone. It’s costing everyone.
One Wheel. Not Two.
ONELife was built on a single premise that Pink Floyd understood in 1979 and most organizations still resist in 2025.
You don’t have a work life and a personal life.
You have one life. One wheel. Eight domains: work, finances, health, relationships, growth, environment, hobbies, and contribution. All connected, all moving together, all affecting each other.
When one domain is in crisis, the whole wheel wobbles. No HR program fixes that. No work-life balance initiative addresses it. Because they were all designed to manage the wall, not remove it.
The ONELife Life Strategy Intelligence (LSI) Score gives every individual a score across all eight domains. Private to them. Built for them. Not a performance tool. A clarity tool. Because you can’t design a life you can’t see.
Tear Down the Wall
Pink Floyd ended The Wall with the wall coming down.
Not in triumph. In necessity. Because the wall had imprisoned the person it was supposed to protect.
That’s where we are now.
The question for every leader, HR director, CEO, and coach is no longer how to manage the wall. It’s whether you have the courage to finally admit it was never real.
Your people don’t have two lives to balance. They have one life to design.
That’s the work. That’s the rhythm. That’s the ONELife.
Ready to see what’s on the other side of the wall? Take the ONELife Assessment to discover your archetype, LSI score, and which of your eight domains are creating friction. Because you can’t brick up half a person and expect whole performance.
Because life is the work that matters most.
Listen to “Another Brick in the Wall” by Pink Floyd: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrxX9TBj2zY





