August 2025
Reclaiming your right to do nothing.
In 2019, the World Health Organization officially classified burnout as an occupational phenomenon. Since then, it has only accelerated. A 2024 Gallup survey found that nearly half of all workers report feeling burned out "sometimes" or "always." We wear exhaustion like a badge, and rest has become something we feel we must earn.
Think about the language we use: "I deserve a break." "I've earned this vacation." The implication is clear — rest is a reward for sufficient productivity. But your body does not operate on a merit system. Your nervous system needs downtime the way your lungs need air. It is not optional, and it is not conditional.
When you rest — truly rest, without scrolling, planning, or consuming — your brain activates what neuroscientists call the Default Mode Network (DMN). This network is responsible for self-reflection, creative insight, memory consolidation, and emotional processing. It is where your most important inner work happens, and it only comes online when you stop trying to be productive.
A landmark study at Washington University found that the DMN is most active during wakeful rest and that suppressing it (through constant task-switching and stimulation) is linked to higher rates of depression, anxiety, and cognitive decline. In other words, doing nothing is not laziness. It is maintenance.
"You do not need to justify your need for rest any more than you need to justify your need for water."
This month, try Yoga Nidra — sometimes called "yogic sleep." Lie down on your back. Close your eyes. Follow a guided body scan that moves your awareness slowly through each part of your body. The practice typically lasts 20 to 40 minutes. You are not trying to fall asleep, though it is perfectly fine if you do. You are hovering in the liminal space between waking and sleeping, where the body does its deepest restoration.
Research from the Armed Forces Medical College in India found that 30 minutes of Yoga Nidra can produce brain wave patterns equivalent to several hours of sleep. It is one of the most efficient forms of rest available to us, and all it requires is a flat surface and a willingness to stop.
This August, give yourself permission to rest without reason. Your body will thank you.
With ease,
The Salus Team
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