Picture the colleague who quietly keeps the best leads for himself. He hits his number every quarter, and for a while it looks like sharp self-interest. Then something shifts. The people around him stop looping him in. The introductions dry up. The favors he used to get without asking now need asking.
He optimized for himself, and the thing he was standing on, the team, got a little worse. So did his life inside it.
I think that is the idea behind an old line about bees. What is bad for the hive turns out to be bad for the bee. Not because it is noble to think that way, but because the bee genuinely cannot thrive in a collapsing hive. It is a claim about self-interest, not a sermon.
A quick note before I go further. I am not a psychologist or an organizational scientist, just someone who reads this stuff and has managed a few teams. The workplace findings below are patterns observed in particular groups of people, not settled laws or advice for your specific situation.
What Marcus actually wrote
The line comes from the private notebook of Marcus Aurelius, the Roman emperor who lived from AD 121 to 180. He jotted these notes to himself in what we now call the Meditations. One translation renders the line as “What does not benefit the hive does not benefit the bee,” and an older version reads “That which is not good for the swarm, neither is it good for the bee.” Same thought, slightly different bees.
Marcus was not writing a management book. He was reminding himself that a person is a part of something larger, and that acting against the whole is a kind of quiet self-harm. That is as far into the history as I want to go. The interesting question is whether the claim holds up now.
The everyday version at work
You have probably watched someone win the meeting and lose the room. They score the point, land the clever rebuttal, make the other person look slow. On paper they won. In practice they spent something, and they will feel the bill later when nobody wants to build with them. The opposite move is stranger and more useful. In my own experience running teams, the thing that pulled a group closer was admitting a mistake out loud. When I owned a real error, it stopped being carelessness and became a lesson, and it made it safe for everyone else to do the same. I did not lose standing by doing it. I gained a team that told me the truth earlier.
There is a name for what that does to a group. Amy Edmondson, a professor at Harvard Business School, calls it psychological safety, which she defines as “a shared belief held by members of a team that the team is safe for interpersonal risk taking.” In plain terms, people feel safe to speak up and admit mistakes. In her 1999 study of work teams, she found that this sense of safety helped teams learn from their own errors, and that learning was what led to better performance. Admitting the mistake benefited the hive. The bee did fine. A more recent Google, which I recently covered, came to essentially the same conclusion.
Adding to this, a 2014 Stanford study by Priyanka Carr and Gregory Walton, reported by phys.org, people who were simply made to feel they were working alongside others stuck at a hard task up to 64 percent longer than those working alone.
It’s not clear cut but it seems to me that the modern research agrees with Aurelius.
The wider circle
The hive is not only your immediate team. Imagine a company that decides to chase one number, say quarterly signups, and starts nudging users into subscriptions they did not quite mean to buy. The number goes up. The thing customers actually came for, trust, quietly erodes. A year later the growth stalls and nobody can point to the day it broke. What was bad for the larger whole was bad for the part, even the part that looked like it was winning. You can watch the same pattern in a team where one person hoards information to stay indispensable, and in a manager who takes credit down the chain to look sharp upstairs. Each move pays out in the short run. Each one degrades the surface the person is standing on. The collaborative instinct cuts the other way too. A team that actually shares what it knows makes better calls, and the people inside it end up looking smarter because the group is smarter. The arithmetic is not sentimental. It just compounds in a direction most people underestimate.
Where the frame breaks
One Stoic line is not a rule to run your life on, and I want to be honest about the limits. Read too eagerly, “serve the hive” becomes a licence for self-erasure, the thing bad managers say when they want you to work weekends for free. It can also keep you loyal to a hive that is bad for you, which is likely not what Marcus meant and not something the workplace research supports.
The test has to run both ways. If what harms the whole harms the part, then a hive that consistently harms its parts is not a healthy whole, and staying is not the wise move. The line is a lens for spotting when your short-term gain is quietly costing the thing you depend on. It is not a vow of obedience.
So here is where I actually land. People who optimize hard for themselves inside a team do not usually get caught, and they do not usually flame out in some dramatic way. They just slowly become less useful to the people around them, and the people around them slowly become less useful to them, and one day the whole arrangement is thinner than it used to be. That is the part Marcus got right, and it is the part the research keeps quietly confirming. The bee who drains the hive is not clever. The bee is early to a loss it has not noticed yet. Two thousand years on, the arithmetic still runs the same direction, and I think anyone who has spent time inside a working team already knows it.








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