Learning to Rest Without Feeling Guilty

in #life2 days ago

I have been reminding myself that we work to live, not the other way around. Rest is not a reward that we earn only when we are exhausted, it is a responsibility we owe to our bodies and minds. When we treat rest like permission that must be justified, we slip into a cycle of pushing harder, then crashing, then pushing again. That is not discipline, it is neglect.

Choosing to pause is a sign of respect for our health, our relationships, and our future self. It keeps our thinking clear, our patience steady, and our motivation alive. A rested mind can focus better, a rested body can carry more, and a rested heart can show up with kindness. Work improves when we are well, life improves when we are well, and both suffer when we are not.

I do not want to wait until I am at a breaking point before I stop. I want to schedule rest the way I schedule meetings, meals, and exercise, and then honor it without apology. That might look like going to bed on time, taking a quiet walk after lunch, saying no to one more task when my energy is already low, or keeping a weekend morning free for simple, unhurried moments.

Guilt has no place here. Rest is part of doing the job well, and part of living well. When we prioritize it, we are not falling behind, we are making sure we can keep going with strength and clarity.

“Almost everything will work again if you unplug it for a few minutes, including you,” — Anne Lamott

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Have a great day!