My break started a month ago. Before it began I told myself I would review all my Spanish vocab in the first week. It’s been a month and I’m not even halfway there. And yes, sure, I’ve been busy. Since I am “available,” my parents ask me to help around the house a lot more than they usually would. I went out with friends a few times. I started learning the piano. There’s stuff I want to read. But I am still wasting a lot of time.
But that’s not my issue. My issue is that I’m supposed to be on break. The whole point of a break is to relax. Why am I feeling guilty for not being productive?
I started thinking about it more and realized how deeply the urge to be doing something is always there with me. Whenever I’d be going to college, I’d think about the time I waste doing nothing during the drive there. I’d tell myself I need to be listening to a podcast or reading a book. I’d think about ways to be more productive — even the act of relaxing would get hijacked by thoughts of how to learn more efficiently. Even hobbies start feeling like skills that need to justify themselves.
When did productivity become a moral framework? To be bored and be okay with it. To actually live in the moment instead of always doing something for the sake of something else? Why does it feel wrong to live life at ease? To walk for the sake of walking? Why does every single moment have to be useful for a future version of myself? Why do breaks exist just to make the productive part of life better? Why not just to live?
And the strange thing is that this mindset disguises itself as ambition. It sounds responsible. Disciplined. Forward-thinking. But underneath it is a quiet inability to simply exist without justification. And I desperately want to break out of this vicious cycle of always needing.
Effort seems to need justification
Turns out, psychologists already caught us in the act. In 2010, Christopher Hsee ran an experiment where people could either sit and do nothing for fifteen minutes, or do something completely pointless — like walking somewhere out of the way to drop off a piece of paper nobody needed. Left without an excuse, most people chose to just sit there. But hand them even a flimsy reason — any reason, no matter how thin — and they’d pick the pointless errand instead, and report preferring it — even when the task was objectively meaningless. Even though they’d basically been talked into it. We don’t actually mind effort. We mind not having an alibi for it. Half of what I call “wanting to learn Spanish” might just be my brain manufacturing itself an alibi—a preference for having an explanation for time use.
One way to frame what might be happening here: humans often seem to need a justification for effort even when none is actually required — and once justification becomes the point, the intrinsic value of an activity quietly gets crowded out. That’s at least one mechanism. There seem to be a few others working alongside it.
Self-worth getting tied to output
I sometimes feel that productivity became tied with self-worth — and there’s a name for that too: psychologists call it contingent self-worth, when your sense of being a worthwhile person rises and falls with how much you’ve produced lately, rather than staying put. When that happens, rest doesn’t feel neutral anymore, but something that reduces value, hence ultimately creating the need to turn downtime into something that needs defending.
Social comparison
Researchers have a tidy term for this too: upward social comparison, a concept going back to Festinger in the 1950s. We don’t see the average. We see everyone else’s highlight reel and mistake it for the baseline. Modern environments make this easier. Our phones expose us to hyper-productive people, and we think this is the way we should live life for it to mean anything. That we are lagging behind. It shows us how many people are better than us, and rarely those who aren’t. This might not just create envy, but also shift how we define what normal is. The baseline becomes distorted and an ordinary pacing starts to register as underperformance.
These are probably not the same mechanism — idleness aversion, contingent self-worth, and upward comparison are each doing something different. But they seem to compound each other, all pushing in the same direction.
But it’s not just our phones. It feels like modern culture itself increasingly treats everything as a measure of something else — at least in the environments many of us move through. Friendships get framed as networking, exercise as performance or aesthetics. Nothing for itself. Nothing purely to live. Activities lose intrinsic value and become instruments. And if someone stops treating them this way, the world won’t stop with them. And they know it.
We fear stagnation, especially in the hypercompetitive environment we live in. And many of us are born into this. A lot of what surrounds us seems to encourage it. And we often don’t notice ourselves drifting into this mindset — one that seems to erode presence, stress us out, erode the ability to wander mentally. It becomes harder to sit in silence. To stare into the void and expect nothing in return.
(There’s a complication worth being honest about here: a famous study found a correlation where a wandering mind tends to be, on average, an unhappier mind than a focused one — though the causation probably runs both ways. So maybe the answer isn’t “let your mind drift” so much as “let yourself do nothing on purpose” — the difference between attention leaking away from you and attention you’ve deliberately set free.)
Productivity as identity.
Now our identities are tied to being productive. Our worth can feel increasingly correlated to output: how well we perform at school, how much we invest into our health and looks, our vocabulary, our skills. It can start to feel like people are projects more than humans.
It doesn’t mean that productivity doesn’t matter. One cannot always sit still in a basement and expect to live their best life. But they should be able to do this guilt-free from time to time. The problem isn’t productivity itself but totalizing it.
What this might suggest (tentatively)
I do not think the answer is abandoning ambition or rejecting productivity entirely. Human beings naturally want to create, improve, explore, and build. But perhaps we need parts of life protected from optimization. Not everything meaningful can be measured. Maybe a healthy life requires some spaces that are intentionally useless.
Walks that go nowhere — and it turns out there’s even research on why those work: the idea is that low-demand environments let your directed attention — the kind you burn on tasks and decisions — actually recover, instead of just being depleted more slowly.
Books read slowly without extracting lessons from every page.
Conversations that are not networking opportunities.
Because perhaps the value of life was never supposed to come entirely from output. Perhaps some things are valuable precisely because they lead nowhere. And maybe the ability to sit still without guilt is not laziness, but a form of freedom that seems to be getting harder to hold onto.
*(If you want the receipts: Hsee, Yang & Wang, 2010 on idleness aversion; Crocker & Wolfe, 2001 on contingent self-worth; Killingsworth & Gilbert, 2010 on mind-wandering; Kaplan, 1995 on attention restoration.)*
THE ALIBI FOR EFFORT
The Alibi for Effort
My break started a month ago. Before it began I told myself I would review all my Spanish vocab in the first week. It’s been a month and I’m not even halfway there. And yes, sure, I’ve been busy. Since I am “available,” my parents ask me to help around the house a lot more than they usually would. I went out with friends a few times. I started learning the piano. There’s stuff I want to read. But I am still wasting a lot of time.
But that’s not my issue. My issue is that I’m supposed to be on break. The whole point of a break is to relax. Why am I feeling guilty for not being productive?
I started thinking about it more and realized how deeply the urge to be doing something is always there with me. Whenever I’d be going to college, I’d think about the time I waste doing nothing during the drive there. I’d tell myself I need to be listening to a podcast or reading a book. I’d think about ways to be more productive — even the act of relaxing would get hijacked by thoughts of how to learn more efficiently. Even hobbies start feeling like skills that need to justify themselves.
When did productivity become a moral framework? To be bored and be okay with it. To actually live in the moment instead of always doing something for the sake of something else? Why does it feel wrong to live life at ease? To walk for the sake of walking? Why does every single moment have to be useful for a future version of myself? Why do breaks exist just to make the productive part of life better? Why not just to live?
And the strange thing is that this mindset disguises itself as ambition. It sounds responsible. Disciplined. Forward-thinking. But underneath it is a quiet inability to simply exist without justification. And I desperately want to break out of this vicious cycle of always needing.
Effort seems to need justification
Turns out, psychologists already caught us in the act. In 2010, Christopher Hsee ran an experiment where people could either sit and do nothing for fifteen minutes, or do something completely pointless — like walking somewhere out of the way to drop off a piece of paper nobody needed. Left without an excuse, most people chose to just sit there. But hand them even a flimsy reason — any reason, no matter how thin — and they’d pick the pointless errand instead, and report preferring it — even when the task was objectively meaningless. Even though they’d basically been talked into it. We don’t actually mind effort. We mind not having an alibi for it. Half of what I call “wanting to learn Spanish” might just be my brain manufacturing itself an alibi—a preference for having an explanation for time use.
One way to frame what might be happening here: humans often seem to need a justification for effort even when none is actually required — and once justification becomes the point, the intrinsic value of an activity quietly gets crowded out. That’s at least one mechanism. There seem to be a few others working alongside it.
Self-worth getting tied to output
I sometimes feel that productivity became tied with self-worth — and there’s a name for that too: psychologists call it contingent self-worth, when your sense of being a worthwhile person rises and falls with how much you’ve produced lately, rather than staying put. When that happens, rest doesn’t feel neutral anymore, but something that reduces value, hence ultimately creating the need to turn downtime into something that needs defending.
Social comparison
Researchers have a tidy term for this too: upward social comparison, a concept going back to Festinger in the 1950s. We don’t see the average. We see everyone else’s highlight reel and mistake it for the baseline. Modern environments make this easier. Our phones expose us to hyper-productive people, and we think this is the way we should live life for it to mean anything. That we are lagging behind. It shows us how many people are better than us, and rarely those who aren’t. This might not just create envy, but also shift how we define what normal is. The baseline becomes distorted and an ordinary pacing starts to register as underperformance.
These are probably not the same mechanism — idleness aversion, contingent self-worth, and upward comparison are each doing something different. But they seem to compound each other, all pushing in the same direction.
But it’s not just our phones. It feels like modern culture itself increasingly treats everything as a measure of something else — at least in the environments many of us move through. Friendships get framed as networking, exercise as performance or aesthetics. Nothing for itself. Nothing purely to live. Activities lose intrinsic value and become instruments. And if someone stops treating them this way, the world won’t stop with them. And they know it.
We fear stagnation, especially in the hypercompetitive environment we live in. And many of us are born into this. A lot of what surrounds us seems to encourage it. And we often don’t notice ourselves drifting into this mindset — one that seems to erode presence, stress us out, erode the ability to wander mentally. It becomes harder to sit in silence. To stare into the void and expect nothing in return.
(There’s a complication worth being honest about here: a famous study found a correlation where a wandering mind tends to be, on average, an unhappier mind than a focused one — though the causation probably runs both ways. So maybe the answer isn’t “let your mind drift” so much as “let yourself do nothing on purpose” — the difference between attention leaking away from you and attention you’ve deliberately set free.)
Productivity as identity.
Now our identities are tied to being productive. Our worth can feel increasingly correlated to output: how well we perform at school, how much we invest into our health and looks, our vocabulary, our skills. It can start to feel like people are projects more than humans.
It doesn’t mean that productivity doesn’t matter. One cannot always sit still in a basement and expect to live their best life. But they should be able to do this guilt-free from time to time. The problem isn’t productivity itself but totalizing it.
What this might suggest (tentatively)
I do not think the answer is abandoning ambition or rejecting productivity entirely. Human beings naturally want to create, improve, explore, and build. But perhaps we need parts of life protected from optimization. Not everything meaningful can be measured. Maybe a healthy life requires some spaces that are intentionally useless.
Walks that go nowhere — and it turns out there’s even research on why those work: the idea is that low-demand environments let your directed attention — the kind you burn on tasks and decisions — actually recover, instead of just being depleted more slowly.
Books read slowly without extracting lessons from every page.
Conversations that are not networking opportunities.
Because perhaps the value of life was never supposed to come entirely from output. Perhaps some things are valuable precisely because they lead nowhere. And maybe the ability to sit still without guilt is not laziness, but a form of freedom that seems to be getting harder to hold onto.
*(If you want the receipts: Hsee, Yang & Wang, 2010 on idleness aversion; Crocker & Wolfe, 2001 on contingent self-worth; Killingsworth & Gilbert, 2010 on mind-wandering; Kaplan, 1995 on attention restoration.)*