
Today I’d like to introduce you to the work of Tricia Hersey — poet, performance artist, and Nap Bishop.
For years, she has been inviting people to think differently about rest, not as laziness or something to be earned, but as a deeply human, restorative, and even liberating practice. Rest can care for our bodies, re-center us, and create space for imagination, dreaming, and healing.
At the heart of Hersey’s work is the recognition that this is especially true for people who have experienced oppression, and for communities whose ancestors endured violence, forced labor, and exploitation. She explores these themes in her wonderful book Rest Is Resistance: A Manifesto and through her ongoing work with The Nap Ministry.
Today, I’d simply like to share a few of her quotes from Rest is Resistance. I’m passing along an invitation for us to see what resonates, what challenges us, and what invitations these words might hold:
1. “The Rest Is Resistance framework also does not believe in the toxic idea that we are resting to recharge and rejuvenate so we can be prepared to give more output to capitalism. What we have internalized as productivity has been informed by a capitalist, ableist, patriarchal system. Our drive and obsession to always be in a state of “productivity” leads us to the path of exhaustion, guilt, and shame. We falsely believe we are not doing enough and that we must always be guiding our lives toward more labor. The distinction that must be repeated as many times as necessary is this: We are not resting to be productive. We are resting simply because it is our divine right to do so.”
2. “I feel like a legacy of exhaustion resides somewhere in all of us, but specifically resides in the bodies of those who have melanated skin.”
3. “We are socialized into systems that cause us to conform and believe our worth is connected to how much we can produce. Our constant labor becomes a prison that allows us to be disembodied. We become easy for the systems to manipulate, disconnected from our power as divine beings and hopeless. We forget how to dream. This is how grind culture continues. We internalize the lies and in turn become agents of an unsustainable way of living.”
4. “You must resist anything that doesn’t center your divinity as a human being. You are worthy of care.”
5. “I want us to understand that nuance is freeing and freedom. There is no such thing as cookie-cutter healing. Everyone brings with them an origin story, a history, and identities that are interconnected. There is room to rest in the freedom of managing your own deprogramming journey. It is never either/or and always both/and. You don’t have to grind, hustle, accept burnout as normal, and be in a constant state of exhaustion and sleep deprivation. You don’t have to kill yourself spiritually or physically to live a fruitful life.”
What stands out to you?
—Renee Roederer


























