Rest is Embodied Liberation
Around the breakfast table, a few days before the winter holiday break, my family members look at me and ask: Are we going to REST?
I can be a slow learner. I don't think I'm alone.
In our society, we are enculturated into the capitalist machine that unendingly communicates:
work endlessly
push through
don’t stop
churn
grind
side-hustle
make money
survive
We are convinced it’s the only way. How would we learn to be different?
I didn’t think I deserved rest, especially in the face of horrific inequity and injustice.
I’m taking steps toward learning that horrific inequity and injustice is exactly why we need rest.
Dear friends, it’s changing my life.
It's soaking over me, deep into my bones, heart, and mind. I feel the breath in my lungs. I expand. I deepen. I began to glimpse rest as a daily part of life, not something we kill ourselves to grasp in the future.
Rest is liberation.
"Tricia Hersey whispers 'rest is a form of resistance' to me, to you, to those who think resistance is always movement. Her message is essential: Sit. Lay down. Slow down. Rest is a necessary step in reclaiming our power to resist systemic oppression."
- Ibram X. Kendi
Author of How to Be an Antiracist and Stamped from the Beginning
I notice and let go of my desire to urgently list all tasks, remember everything, work unendingly, and attempt perfection. I notice my desire for certainty and let it go...over and over again.
I expand to grasp tentatively at rest, little by little.
If you follow the Nap Ministry on IG or have read Rest is Resistance, how have you interacted with it? What have you practiced? What resonated?
"This book will save lives and transform the world. Tricia Hersey speaks the truth about rest, a truth that begins our unraveling from the lies of white supremacy and capitalism. Gradually we refuse to live at a machine pace. We surrender to the beautiful experiment of being human. We return to our truest selves. This is a book to read again and again, slowly, savoring it sentence by sentence. I'll be giving copies to everyone I work with and everyone I love."
- Emily Nagoski, Ph.D.
Bestselling author of Come as You Are and Burnout
In this short audio, How to think about rest as a form of resistance from All Things Considered (NPR), Shereen Marisol Meraji interviews Tricia Hersey. She unpacks four tenets of Rest is Resistance:
“Liberation is a process. It is dynamic. It never ends.”
- Emily Towns
I breathe. I let that go over and over again. I think about the glimpse of expansiveness and joy when I practice rest in liberated community.
With joy, I stumble. I breathe.
Envision a liberated future in which we rest. What if that was now?
Consider hope’s flame.
Breathe.
Take a walk. Gaze at the sky.
Listen. Look. Notice.
Sit for ten minutes on the couch. What do you notice?
Listen to your body. What does it know, and what do you want to know?
Let’s rest.
Reclaim the body's knowing as liberation.
This holiday, I’m going to listen over and over. Pull myself back from distraction and numbing. Imperfectly embrace my family’s plea:
Are we going to REST?
It’s radical love. Are you going to rest?
Fellow leaders and learners, I wish you courage, rest, and beloved community along the journey.
What I’m Reading/Watching/Listening to:
Questions for Consideration from Tricia Hersey’s Rest is Resistance Discussion Guide: