Arguably, one of the worst insults you can throw at a person is calling them “lazy.”
To be told you’re lazy isn’t just a throwaway comment about organizational skills or energy levels. It suggests that, at your core, you’re fundamentally inefficient—and in a capitalist culture that equates productivity with worth, it’s about as close as one can get to calling someone useless.
But what if, no matter how unmotivated someone appears, how many tasks they abandon, or how high their dirty laundry piles climb, they aren’t lazy. Because, what if…“lazy people” don’t exist?
It’s a provocative claim, considering most of us can immediately think of an obvious counterexample: The coworker who disappears for hours and never finishes anything. The college roommate who skipped every morning class to smoke weed instead. The deadbeat husband (or ex) who melts into the couch with a beer in one hand while the cooking, childcaring, and cleaning all become your responsibility.
These people exist. We’ve met them. And yet, my point still stands.
Sure, we all have “lazy Sundays,” or even weeks where motivation feels impossible to summon. But among psychologists, there’s a growing consensus that what we call laziness is almost always a mislabel for something else.
“Being a lazy person is a global dispositional statement,” Alison Fragale, PhD, an organizational psychologist, professor at UNC Kenan-Flagler, and author of Likeable Badass, tells SELF. In other words, it’s a character judgment. A fixed one, which would imply that a truly lazy individual wouldn’t put effort into anything, ever. However, everyone applies effort somewhere, Dr. Fragale argues: “It just may not be where you want them to do or find useful.”
Take, for instance, a person who spends four straight hours gaming—focused, strategic, locked in—and we’ll still write them off as “unambitious” if that intensity doesn’t show up in their 9 to 5. Or the one who pours time and care into their relationships or creative projects, only for their labor to be dismissed because it doesn’t translate into anything résumé-worthy.
Beyond that, most people we deem “lazy” aren’t refusing to try. Rather, “a lot of [them] are facing an invisible barrier that’s preventing them from taking action,” Devon Price, PhD, social psychologist and author of Laziness Does Not Exist, tells SELF.
Mental health challenges are an obvious factor—conditions like depression can drain your energy, focus, and ability to initiate even basic tasks, which, from the outside, may read as someone who “can’t even get out of bed” or “won’t respond to any messages.” There’s also executive functioning differences like ADHD, Dr. Price points out, where the lack of output has nothing to do with caring—and everything to do with how attention gets allocated. And burnout, of course, will hollow out even the most driven individual. When you’re chronically overextended—or when your effort stops translating into reward (no promotion, no acknowledgment)—disengagement becomes inevitable.
