lately, i’ve been thinking about what leisure even means anymore. not the kind we post about, not the kind that involves seven-step skincare or aesthetically curated matcha — but real, deep, nervous-system-level leisure. the kind of rest that doesn’t perform, doesn’t pretend, doesn’t ask for proof that it happened. it feels like every free hour i get these days is both a gift and a trap. i enter it with the hope of restoration and leave it slightly more fractured, more overstimulated, more disappointed in myself for not having made better use of it. and that’s the catch, isn’t it? that rest — even rest — has to be “used.” it has to be optimized, validated, shared, structured, captured, evaluated. even when i do something that looks restful, it often comes with a side dish of guilt or internal narration. i scroll. i snack. i respond to a message that didn’t need responding to. i click on a new tab as if it might unlock something. i clean something that no one asked me to clean. i light a candle like i’m casting a spell but can’t quite name what i’m summoning. i try to soften, and instead, i curate.
and the thing is, i’m aware of this. i’m hyper-aware of how wrong it feels, how decorative my rest has become. how it’s no longer rest but some version of aesthetic avoidance. a moment designed to look peaceful while feeling like a slow, polite form of burnout. i’ve been trained — we’ve all been trained — to measure our value in how well we use time. and in that framework, rest is suspicious unless it serves a larger goal. unless it makes us better. sharper. more productive tomorrow. we’re told to rest not because we’re human, but so we can return to our grind in better shape. even leisure has become a recovery strategy. even softness needs an ROI.
i don’t think it used to be like this. when we were kids, we understood leisure instinctively. leisure was lying on the floor with a coloring book and no one hovering behind us with commentary. leisure was spending an hour staring out a window, or playing with a stick we found on the street. it was boredom that wasn’t a problem. it was time that didn’t beg for meaning. and now we look back and call that “inner child work.” we have to retrain ourselves into it. we schedule it into our calendars. we build routines around it. we analyze how it made us feel afterward. it’s beautiful and sincere and still, somehow, exhausting. and all of this makes me wonder: what if the problem isn’t that we don’t have enough time to rest — what if it’s that we’ve forgotten how to feel rested while being ourselves?
it’s hard to undo the performance. we spend our work days proving, measuring, editing ourselves into acceptable versions of productivity. and then we try to switch it off, but the mind doesn’t know how. it’s still in presentation mode. it still needs the pause to mean something. so even when we find ourselves lying on the couch or taking a walk, a small voice inside is narrating the moment like it’s part of a documentary on how well we’re coping. it’s not silence. it’s surveillance. and it’s not our fault. we’ve been trained to believe that pleasure must be earned, that stillness must be justified, that a moment without output is a moment lost. but what if that’s the lie? what if we’ve never needed to earn softness — just remember how to allow it?
i try to think back to the last time leisure felt easy. not glamorous. not branded. not content. just ease. the answer is always the same. it wasn’t a spa or a vacation or a day off. it was something smaller. drinking coffee slowly while no one needed anything from me. sitting on a balcony while the city moved without me. watching a bird for too long and not turning it into a metaphor. that was leisure. the quiet kind. the unremarkable kind. the kind no one else would clap for, but my nervous system did. it felt like coming home to myself without having to ring the bell or wait to be let in. and it didn’t require a plan. it just required my absence from performance.
still, it’s not easy to get there. we’re overstimulated. we’re hyper-aware. our minds are noisy, twitchy, hungry for novelty. we open new tabs compulsively. we scroll and forget what we were looking for. we click into distraction like it’s a reflex. and by the end of the day, we haven’t done anything that made us feel more alive, but we’ve certainly looked busy doing it. and then we wonder why we’re tired. it’s because we’ve turned rest into labor. we’ve turned leisure into something that demands structure and feedback. and when that feedback doesn’t come, we don’t feel like we’ve done it “right.”
so lately, i’ve been trying something gentler. a kind of micro-practice of real rest. letting things be unremarkable. letting things be undocumented. choosing to do something without asking it to mean anything. reading a book with no goal of finishing. lying in bed with music and no screen. walking just to walk. not to count steps. not to mentally problem-solve. just to be a body moving through space without agenda. sometimes i stare out the window for ten minutes, let boredom show up, and then stay long enough to feel its edges soften into something familiar. it’s not always blissful. sometimes i get antsy. but sometimes, if i stay long enough, it becomes ease. and not the curated kind — the cellular kind.
we’ve spent so long aestheticizing rest that we’ve forgotten the point of it. the best moments of leisure don’t look like much. they’re not photogenic. they’re not impressive. they often look like nothing. like pausing in a sunbeam. like holding a warm mug and forgetting what you were upset about. like sitting on the floor with no plans. and maybe that’s why they’re powerful — because they’re ours. because they exist only in the body, not the feed. because they ask for nothing and give us back ourselves.
and maybe that’s the point of leisure. maybe it’s not about detaching from work or stress or roles — maybe it’s about detaching from the part of ourselves that always has to prove. maybe rest is the only time we get to be unmarketable. unefficient. unnecessary. maybe that’s the gift. and maybe the reason it’s so hard to accept is because we’ve spent years learning that our worth lives in our usefulness.
but you’re allowed to rest. not because you’ve earned it. not because you’re broken. but because you exist. and because existing — in this world, in this culture, in this time — is exhausting enough. you don’t have to optimize your off-hours. you don’t have to prove your peace. you don’t have to curate your leisure. you just have to notice it. and let it be yours.
so if your brain won’t turn off, if your version of rest always ends with guilt or more tiredness, if you find yourself performing leisure instead of feeling it — you’re not alone. you’re not failing. you’re just adjusting. and maybe, just maybe, the most luxurious thing you can do is let yourself stop trying so hard. let yourself do nothing. let yourself be a person with no agenda for a while. because maybe quality leisure isn’t something we build. maybe it’s something we remember. and maybe the quiet, boring, unremarkable moments — the ones you didn’t post — were the most restful ones after all.
I cherish the quiet of early mornings, a time to soothe my mind, savor a warm cup of coffee, and breathe in the crisp, fresh air. Its the time of day where I can feel my true self in my own skin.
"we’ve spent so long aestheticizing rest that we’ve forgotten the point of it. the best moments of leisure don’t look like much. they’re not photogenic. they’re not impressive. (...) because they exist only in the body, not the feed. because they ask for nothing and give us back ourselves." Wow wow wow 🥹