Resting sounds simple.
You stop working.
You relax.
You recharge.
In theory.
In reality, resting is a full-time job with overtime, emotional labor, and no clear instructions.
Step 1: Choosing to Rest (The Application Process)
First, you must decide to rest.
This is not easy.
You need to:
- justify it to yourself
- check if you’ve “earned it”
- negotiate with guilt
- and pretend you didn’t hear your responsibilities calling from another room
By the time you decide to rest, you are already tired again.
Step 2: Finding a Comfortable Position (Project Planning Phase)
You lie down.
Immediately:
- your back is wrong
- your pillow is too confident
- your leg is suddenly unsure of its life choices
You adjust.
Then readjust.
Then realize you’ve been “resting” for 12 minutes without actually resting.
Step 3: The Mandatory Overthinking Break
Now that your body is still, your brain starts working overtime.
Suddenly you remember:
- that email you didn’t send
- that message you replied to too quickly
- that random conversation from 2018
- and why you said “you too” at the wrong time again
Resting is now mentally very busy.
Step 4: The Guilt Subtask
Resting comes with invisible tasks like:
- “Am I being productive enough?”
- “Should I be doing something useful?”
- “Is resting even allowed at this time of day?”
This is the unpaid internship portion of rest.
No benefits. Just anxiety.
Step 5: The Fake Productivity Check
To feel better, you check your phone.
Just quickly.
But now you are:
- responding to messages
- watching something “for 2 minutes”
- reorganizing your thoughts about life at 2% battery
Resting has temporarily switched departments.
Step 6: The Accidental Nap Negotiation
At some point, your body tries to take over.
It says:
“We are sleeping now.”
Your brain replies:
“No, just resting.”
So you enter the mysterious state of:
conscious exhaustion pretending to be rest
No one understands this phase. Not even you.
Step 7: The “Did I Rest Enough?” Audit
After what feels like either 5 minutes or 3 hours, you wake up (or sit up).
You immediately evaluate performance:
- Did I rest correctly?
- Was it efficient?
- Should I rest again to fix the first rest?
Resting now requires a performance review.
Final Truth
Resting is not passive.
It is:
- planning
- overthinking
- adjusting
- guilt management
- and accidental distraction
All while pretending to be “doing nothing.”
And somehow…
it still feels like the most exhausting thing you did all day.


