In 1905, German sociologist Max Weber observed something troubling about modern capitalism: somewhere along the way, we’d gotten things backwards.
“Man exists for the sake of business,” Weber wrote, “instead of the reverse.”
Think about that for a moment.
Not “business serves life.” Not “work enables living.”
But man exists for business.
Weber wasn’t celebrating this shift. He was sounding an alarm. He’d identified a fundamental inversion in how people related to work. What was once a means (work supports life) had become an end (life supports work).
The Question We Keep Asking
Ever since, we’ve been stuck asking the same tired question:
“Do we work to live, or live to work?”
As if we have to choose. As if one or the other is the “right” answer.
But here’s the problem: it’s a false choice.
The question itself accepts Weber’s inversion as inevitable. It assumes work and life are separate, opposing forces, and you must pick a side.
- Pick “work to live” and you’re pragmatic but uninspired
- Pick “live to work” and you’re passionate but unbalanced
Neither is actually a strategy. Both leave you fragmented.
The Real Problem Isn’t Work. It’s the Split.
We’ve spent 120 years trying to “balance” work and life as if they’re two different things on a scale.
We added “work-life integration” when balance felt impossible.
We added “work-life harmony” when integration sounded exhausting.
But none of it worked because we’re still treating work and life as separate.
💡 Weber saw where this leads: work becomes an “iron cage,” a system that traps us even after we’ve forgotten why we’re in it. We work compulsively, chase success relentlessly, optimize constantly, but we’re not sure for what.
What If There Was Never Supposed to Be Two?
This is where ONELife begins.
Not with balance. Not with integration. Not with harmony.
With unity.
You don’t have a work life and a personal life.
You have one life, lived across eight interconnected domains:
- Work & Career
- Relationships
- Health
- Finances
- Hobbies
- Giving Back
- Growth & Learning
- Environment
When work dominates, the other seven suffer.
When you neglect work, the whole system destabilizes.
The goal isn’t to choose between work and life. It’s to align all eight domains with your purpose.
From Weber’s Warning to Your Way Forward
Weber warned us where we were headed. He was right.
But he didn’t have a solution. He just described the cage.
ONELife is the way out.
Instead of asking “work to live or live to work,” ask:
➜ What’s my purpose?
➜ How do all eight domains serve that purpose?
➜ Where am I misaligned?
➜ What needs to shift?
Take the ONELife Assessment and discover your Life Strategy Intelligence (LSI) score. See where you’re actually living, not where you wish you were.
Because 120 years after Weber’s warning, it’s time to stop asking the wrong question.
It’s time to stop splitting your life in two.





