In Defense of Doing Nothing

Modern society romanticizes staying busy, touting it as the norm. I believe that doing nothing is a form of productivity. Why? Because downtime is productive. Allow me to explain. Have you noticed that your best ideas come while you’re lying down before bed or folding laundry? When your brain is in rest mode, your imagination and creativity emerge as you’re in a relaxed and expansive state. Also known as the default mode network, this shift in brainwaves connects your thoughts and visualizations into insights you can act on. Therefore, there is value in being bored and sitting alone, staring at the wall. You don’t have to turn on a podcast, scroll through social media, or listen to music to fill the gaps between tasks. Instead of trying to escape from boredom and silence, take advantage of what staying idle has to offer– guidance and inspiration.
Make Space to Receive
It’s in these moments that I reflect on my life and reconsider my priorities, and something clicks. Ideas I may have forgotten about months ago come to mind if I allow them to. I suddenly remember where I left my glasses or the order I need to place. So, make room for memories and visions to pass through. Constantly consuming information overfills and overworks the hippocampus, leaving less space for innovation or life-changing habits. Guilt would eat at me for taking breaks until I realized it cost me more than burnout. I lost my spark and functioned on autopilot most of my days. Humans are not machines. You’re meant to create and get outside of yourself to see what else is possible, rather than staying stuck in a rat race trying to reach the top. You are meant to discover, slow down, and handle everything one step at a time. Don’t fill every moment with what drains you. Toxic productivity stems from societal pressure to be occupied 24/7, which is harmful for mental and physical health.
Embrace Boredom
You may feel uncomfortable in instances of stillness if you focus on quantity and achievements, only prioritizing measurable goals and activities. However, you start to lose yourself in the process. That’s why it’s unsettling to sit with yourself or walk with no music. It’s unfamiliar and awkward, but true growth happens because you finally cut out the noise and hear yourself again. You come back and re-group with yourself, checking in to see what’s authentic and important to you without external influence. You are open to new thoughts and solutions when your head is at ease. Your revelations might apply to work, a project or hobby, or your personal life.
By learning to pause, detox, and embrace the mundane or silent moments, you reconnect and recharge, coming out aware and inspired. Your intuition and creativity realign with the natural rhythm of your mind. That’s why doing nothing is one of the most productive things to do– it fuels your productivity and clarity in a healthy way. Give yourself permission to reset and build the foundation for a slower but more intentional routine.
Editor: Shannon Hensley









