What Did Ancient Humans Do All Day (No Jobs)?

You wake up when your body is ready. No alarm, no buzzing phone, no schedule waiting to swallow your day. For 300,000 years, that was simply how a human morning began. So what did your ancestors actually do all day? In this video you'll see what anthropologists found when they measured it — that hunter-gatherers like the Ju/'hoansi and the Hadza fed themselves on as little as 15 hours a week, then spent the rest of the day napping, talking, making beads, and telling stories by the fire. You'll learn why one researcher called them "the original affluent society," why farming may have been "the worst mistake in human history," and why the guilt you feel on a quiet afternoon is far newer than you think. Real studies, real sites, real skeletons — no myths. If this reframed how you see your own week, hit like, drop a comment with the part that surprised you most, and subscribe for more on how your ancestors really lived. #ancienthumans #prehistory #humanevolution #huntergatherers #anthropology #earlyhumans #stoneage #huntergatherer #humanhistory #archaeology #originalaffluentsociety #kalahari #sandiego #hadza #jaredsdiamond #worstmistake #humanorigins #ancestors #evolution #historyfacts #didyouknow #paleolithic #foragers #deephistory #humannature