Rest Isn’t Quitting

Refueling Is Part of the Plan

Rest has always been hard for me.

When I slow down, guilt shows up first. Then anxiety. Then the panic that I should be doing something. Anything.

I’ve tied my worth to how much I do for as long as I can remember. Especially what I do for others. If I’m not producing, helping, fixing, building… who am I?

So when I rest, my brain doesn’t.

It speeds up.

Lately it’s been running a trauma loop. Replaying. Rethinking. Re-feeling. When my body slows down, my mind tries to take over.

And that makes rest even harder.

Add disability into the mix and it gets complicated.

If I push myself to exhaustion, I pay for it. Usually in pain. Usually for days. Hard to move. Hard to function.

And yet… I still do it sometimes.

“I won’t do that again,” I say.
And then I do it again. 🙃

But something shifted this year.

At the beginning of the year, I made a goal:
Start listening to my body.

SomeBODY has to do it.

I realized I was burning out. Pushing too hard. Getting sick. Running on fumes.

And then there’s this deeper layer.

The death of my daughter, Nicole, on September 7, 2024 changed everything.

I made a promise to her.

That I would live for both of us now.

And living doesn’t mean running myself into the ground.

It means staying healthy. Staying present. Staying here.

Rest isn’t weakness.

It’s sustainability.

Nap time is sacred over here. I get up between 4:30 and 5:30am most days. By noon, I’m exhausted. So I nap. Some days I only rest my eyes. Some days I sleep hard. Other days I skip it and go to bed at 7pm like someone’s grandma.

And that’s okay.

Rest looks different now than it did five years ago.

Because I’m different.

Life is different.

Grief is different.

My body is different.

Learning to rest has been like learning a new language.

Start small. Two minutes. Just two. Then five.

I still struggle to do nothing.

But I’m getting there.

You matter.

You are important.

You deserve rest.

Not because you earned it.

But because you are human.


💛 Your Turn

Do you struggle with resting without guilt?

What does refueling look like for you?

Leave a comment on the blog. Let’s normalize rest together.


Comments

2 comments on “Rest Isn’t Quitting”

  1. Maureen Campbell Avatar
    Maureen Campbell

    I too struggle with rest. The guilt of just sitting overwhelms me at times. I’m the same at work. How dare I sit and take my 15 min break at work. But if we don’t stop we will fall. Our bodies and minds cannot sustain the constant “go” I want to put my body through. I can’t just sit. But this year I too am learning it’s ok to be still. Meditation is hard for me as I sit still but within a couple minutes I forget to listen to the meditation and am thinking about what I need to do next! I have learned to listen to audio books this year. It helps keep my mind focused on the book and not on what comes next, it helps me stop and get the rest I need. Sometimes I have to listen to the same chapter 2 or 3 times but I am getting better at the staying still part. Life is busy crazy and full of pressure. As a nurse my job is also go, go, go, all the time but burn out is something that is happening to many nurses because they forget to look after themselves. As a travel nurse in the Arctic the environment is soothing and calming and the pace of life is much slower here. It has taught me to enjoy the darkness and the light and to sit and breathe. It will be OK to sit!

    1. Shelly Rand Avatar
      Shelly Rand

      Maureen, thank you so much for sharing this. I think a lot of people will read your comment and quietly think, “Yes… that’s exactly how I feel too.”

      That guilt around resting is real. It sneaks in and tries to convince us that if we’re not constantly “doing,” we’re somehow falling behind. But you said something incredibly important: if we don’t stop, we will fall. Our bodies and minds simply weren’t built for nonstop “go.”

      I love that you’ve found audiobooks as a way to help your mind slow down. That’s actually such a smart strategy. Stillness doesn’t have to look like perfect meditation. Sometimes it’s just giving your brain a gentler place to land.

      And being a nurse, especially in environments where it’s constantly go-go-go, you see firsthand what burnout does to people. The fact that you’re learning to sit, breathe, and appreciate that slower pace where you are right now is powerful.

      Your last line really stuck with me: “It will be OK to sit.” That might be the permission a lot of people needed to hear today.

      Thank you again for sharing part of your story here. 💛

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