Optimization was supposed to make life better.
And in many ways, it did. We track our sleep, refine our workflows, upgrade our diets, measure our performance, and manage our time with surgical precision. We have more tools, more systems, and more control than any generation before us.
Yet something feels tighter.
The Optimization Trap argues that improvement has quietly become total. What began as useful refinement has evolved into a framework that colonizes everything. Productivity becomes morality. Health becomes performance. Leisure becomes strategy. Rest becomes recovery. Even identity becomes measurable.
When everything is optimized, nothing is allowed to drift.
Cassian Roen examines how metrics moved from factories into our bodies, how efficiency became virtue, and how calibration replaced exploration. He shows why constant improvement increases fragility, why deviation creates anxiety, and why life narrows as precision increases.
This is not an attack on ambition.
It is an examination of what happens when improvement becomes permanent.
Sharp, controlled, and deeply resonant, The Optimization Trap offers a structural diagnosis of modern life in an age where better never feels finished.