CONCEPT
Flow as Feeling Rule
The conversion of Csikszentmihalyi's psychological description into a prescriptive cultural norm that pathologizes non-flow experience and devalues the unoptimizable labor of domestic presence.
Flow, as Csikszentmihalyi originally described it, was a naturally occurring state of optimal human experience arising from specific conditions — matched challenge and skill, clear goals, immediate feedback. His framework was careful to note that flow could not be willed into existence. The cultural discourse that absorbed his research stripped away these qualifications, presenting flow as something the properly oriented individual should be able to achieve through the right mindset. AI tools have completed this conversion by making flow more accessible and, paradoxically, more obligatory. When flow becomes the baseline of satisfactory emotional experience, everything that is not flow becomes deficient — including the non-flow experiences that characterize domestic life, relational presence, and the ascending friction of sustained human engagement. Hochschild's framework identifies this conversion as the elevation of flow to a feeling rule, with all the consequences feeling rules entail.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The transformation is not difficult to trace. Csikszentmihalyi's research described a state; the culture that absorbed the research prescribed it. TED talks, management books,