
April 6, 2026

“How was your weekend?”
“Oh girl, we had sports, kid activities… then we threw a party for 100 people. I did all the food myself while Bob chopped wood for the firepit.”
You know this conversation.
We have all heard it. Most of us have lived it. And if we are honest, there are moments we have leaned into it a little, letting the busyness speak for us. There is something almost comforting about being able to say, “I am exhausted.” But it is worth asking the harder question.
What is busy actually doing for you? Does it make you feel important? More in control? Less at risk of being seen as lazy or unproductive?
We live in a culture that rewards exhaustion.
It tells us, quietly but consistently, that being overwhelmed means we matter. That productivity equals worth. That rest is something you earn after everything else is done. And the problem is, everything is never done.
I sit with couples every week who tell me they do not have time for each other. They are not wrong. Their lives are full. Work, kids, obligations, constant input. But when something becomes a real priority, time has a way of showing up. That is the truth most people do not want to say out loud. We make time for what we value. And connection, whether with a partner or with yourself, does not happen in a life that never slows down.
Busyness is rarely just about a full schedule. It is usually tied to something deeper.
“My value increases with how much I produce.” You can hear it in the way we talk about people. She does everything. He never stops. I do not know how she keeps up. We admire it, reinforce it and build our identities around it. But when your worth is tied to output, rest starts to feel uncomfortable. Even threatening. If you are not producing, what are you doing?
You are being human. And for a lot of people, that is the part that feels unfamiliar.
When things get quiet, what you have been outrunning has space to catch up. The thoughts you pushed aside. The emotions you have not named. The tension in your body you have learned to ignore. Rest does not just slow your body down. It brings you back into contact with yourself.
And that is where many people reach for distraction.
The phone. The scrolling. The constant input. Not because you are lazy. Because stillness requires presence. And presence can feel vulnerable.
Rest is not something you earn after everything else is handled. It is something your system requires to function well. Without it, you are not more productive. You are more reactive. More depleted. Less available in the moments that actually matter.
If you are constantly running, you are not fully living. You are managing.
This is where people tend to overcomplicate things. Rest does not have to be a full day off or a perfectly planned routine. It starts much smaller. Noticing the moment you push past your own limit. Pausing instead of immediately reaching for your phone. Letting five minutes be just five minutes.
You might try:
The goal is not to do it perfectly. The goal is to begin noticing how often you move past your own need to pause.
For many women, especially in seasons of transition, rest feels unnatural at first. You have spent years being needed. Anticipating. Managing. Holding things together. Slowing down can feel like you are dropping something important.
You are not.
You are shifting out of a pace that was never sustainable to begin with. A full life is not built on constant movement. It is built on rhythm. And rest is part of that rhythm. When you stop requiring yourself to earn it, something changes. You are no longer proving your worth through how much you can carry. You start experiencing it in how you live.
And that is where things begin to feel different.

Laurie is a Licensed Professional Counselor with her Masters of Science in Counseling from Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX. She is also a graduate of McGill University in Montreal. She received advanced practical training in Emotionally Focused Therapy for couples and families at UT Southwestern, where she spent five years in the Department of Psychiatry’s Family Studies Clinic working with diverse clients of all ages. In addition, she has completed training in Collaborative Law for couples seeking divorce to find solutions in a more amicable way.
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