Hersey’s message is aimed specifically at Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, highlighting the role that systemic racism plays in perpetuating chronic stress and the deprivation of rest. As Emily Lawrence writes in Parade, “Research has shown that not only are people of color less likely to be afforded adequate rest than white Americans, but this lack of rest could exacerbate racial health disparities.” Lawrence notes that “The rest centered around the ‘rest as resistance’ movement is less about burnout and is rooted in Black liberation.”
For Dr. Hersey, rest is a process of decolonization from the programming of “grind culture,” white supremacy, and capitalism. “This culture does not want you rested unless it is attached to your increased labor and productivity,” she writes in Rest is Resistance. “No one will give you rest. This is an outlier investigation. A counternarrative. It is trust work. It is healing work. It is decolonizing work. It is a subculture holding space for the blossoming of a resistance.”
To those who argue that the ability to rest is merely a function of privilege, Dr. Hersey writes, “You are worthy of rest. We don’t have to earn rest. Rest is not a luxury, a privilege, or a bonus we must wait for once we are burned out. I hear so many repeat the myth of rest being a privilege and I understand this concept and still deeply disagree with it. Rest is not a privilege because our bodies are still our own, no matter what the current systems teach us.”
Resources for further exploration:
- ‘Rest Is Resistance’ Is the Racial Justice Movement Everyone’s Talking About—Here’s What That Means (Parade)
- Rest Is Resistance: How to dream your way toward a radically decolonized future. (The Cut)
- < Why rest is an act of resistance (NPR)
- The Founder of the Nap Ministry on the Ways Rest Can Be a Form of Resistance (SELF)
- Recommended reading list to kick off the New Year promotes rest, healing and power of community (Kresge Foundation)
- TRICIA HERSEY on Deprogramming from Grind Culture (For the Wild podcast)
- Grinding Isn’t The Best For Your Mental Health: Here Is A Better Alternative (Essence)
A soundtrack for rest, curated by the Nap Ministry’s Tricia Hersey (Washington Post)