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Home | In The Media | The Lost Practice of Resting One Day . . .
 





The Lost Practice of Resting One Day Each Week
Rita Bryan, President and Co-Founder

In our busy lives, we often overlook the power that a good day of rest can have in just about all aspects of our lives.  While this is a little off-topic from what we usually talk about here at Genesis Personal Fitness, I felt compelled to write about this since many of the clients I work with and coach seldom leave enough time for themselves to just "reset their engines".  Enjoy!

Ask any physician and they will tell you that rest is essential for physical health. When the body is deprived of sleep, it is unable to rebuild and recharge itself adequately. Your body requires rest.

Ask any athlete and they will tell you that rest is essential for healthy physical training. Rest is needed for physical muscles to repair themselves and prevent injury. This is true whether you run marathons, pitch baseballs, lift weights or climb rocks. Your muscles require rest.

Ask many of yesterday's philosophers and they will tell you that rest is essential for the mind. Leonardo da Vinci said, "Every now and then go away, have a little relaxation, for when you come back to your work your judgment will be surer." And Ovid, the Roman poet, said, "Take rest; a field that has rested gives a bountiful crop." Your mind requires rest.

Ask most religious leaders and they will tell you that rest is essential for the soul. Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Baha'i, and Wiccan (among others) teach the importance of setting aside a period of time for rest. Your soul requires rest.


  
Ask many corporate leaders
and they will tell you that rest is essential for productivity. Forbes magazine recently wrote, "You can only work so hard and do so much in a day. Everybody needs to rest and recharge." Your productivity requires rest.

Physicians, athletes, philosophers, poets, religious leaders, and corporate leaders all tell us the same thing: take time to rest. It is absolutely essential for a balanced, healthy life.

Yet, when you ask most people in today's frenzied culture if they consistetly set aside time for rest, they will tell you that they are just too busy to rest. Even fewer would say that they don't set aside any concentrated time (12-24 hours) for rest. There are just too many things to get done, too many demands, too many responsibilities, too many bills, and too much urgency. Nobody seems to be able to afford to waste time resting in today's results-oriented culture.

Unfortunately, this hectic pace is causing damage to our quality of life. We are literally destroying every sense of our being (body, mind, and soul). There is a reason we run faster and work harder, but only fall farther behind. Our lives have become too full and too out of balance. Somewhere along the way, we lost the essential practice of concentrated rest. We would be wise to reclaim the ancient, lost practice of resting one day each week.

To get back into balance, just consider the countless benefits of concentrated rest for all aspects of your life:

  • Healthier body - We each get one life and one body to live it in. Therefore, we eat healthy, we exercise, and we watch our bad habits. But then we allow our schedules to fill up from morning to evening. Rest is as essential to our physical health as the water we drink and the air we breathe.


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    Less stress -
    Stress is basically the perception that the situations we are facing are greater than the resources we have to deal with them - resources such as time, energy, ability, and help from others. We have two choices, either reduce the demands or increase our resources. Concentrated rest confronts stress in both ways. First, it reduces the demands of the situation. We have no demands on us as long as we have the ability to mentally let go of unfinished tasks. Secondly, rest reduces stress by increasing our resources, particularly energy.

  • Deeper relationships - A day set aside each week for rest allows relationships with people to deepen and be strengthened. When we aren't rushing off to work or soccer practice, we are able to enjoy each other's company and a healthy conversation. And long talks prove to be far more effective in building community than short ones on the ride to the mall.

  • Opportunity for reflection - Sometimes it is hard to see the forest through the trees. It is even more difficult to see the forest when we are running through the trees. Concentrated rest allows us to take a step back, to evaluate our lives, to identify our values, and determine if our life is being lived for them.

  • Balance - Taking one day of your week and dedicating it to rest will force you to have an identity outside of your occupation. It will foster relationships outside of your fellow employees. It will foster activities and hobbies outside our work. It will give you life and identity outside of your Monday-Friday occupation. Rather than defining your life by what you do, you can begin to define it by who you are.

  • Increased production - Just like resting physical muscles allows them opportunity to rejuvenate which leads to greater physical success, providing our minds with rest provides it opportunity to refocus and rejuvenate. More work is not better work. Smarter work is better work.

  • Reserve for life's emergencies - Crisis hits everyone. Nobody who is alive is immune from the "storms" that life often brings to everyone. By starting the discipline today of concentrated rest, you will build up reserves for when the unexpected emergencies of life strike... and rest is no longer an option.

In a future article I am currently writing about "rest", I will offer you some effective how-to steps on how you can reclaim the lost practice of weekly rest in your life.  Stay tuned!