The Lazy Week After Christmas, Pt 1
Embrace The Pause
We are normally at a loss on what to do during this week,after Christmas before the New Year rolls in. This week is commonly referred to as the lazy week. In this post I want to share my take on how you can show upduring this week.
Why Rest Is Not a Waste
There’s something quietly magical about the week between Christmas and New Year.
Your body needs it
The final quarter of the year (whether your year ends in Dec, June or January) often pushes us to our limits. Deadlines stack up, calendars overflow, social obligations multiply, and the pressure to “finish strong” can override our body’s quiet requests for rest. Many of us run on caffeine, adrenaline, and sheer determination.
By the time December ends, our bodies are tired — not just physically, but at a cellular level.
Rest during this season allows your nervous system to shift out of survival mode. It gives your muscles time to release tension, your immune system space to strengthen, and your energy reserves a chance to refill. This isn’t laziness; it’s recovery.
Think of it like recalibrating a machine. Continuous use without maintenance leads to breakdowns. But intentional rest restores function and prevents burnout. When you slow down now, you’re not falling behind — you’re protecting your capacity for what comes next.
Your mind craves it
I work well early in the morning and late at night and I came to discover, these are periods after a time of rest. When I wake up and just after the 5 O’clock rush. Then too immediately after lunch time rest, my brain kicks in. Why is this?
Your productivity benefits from it
When I try to work through my tiredness, I find I spend more time doing things than I would normally do. Here’s the paradox many people miss:rest doesn’t compete with productivity — it fuels it. The most effective leaders,creatives, and high performers understand this deeply. They don’t wait until exhaustion forces them to stop; they schedule rest as part of their success strategy.
Intentional downtime sharpens focus, enhances creativity, and improves decision-making.
When you allow yourself to rest now, you return to your work renewed rather than depleted.
- You think more clearly.
- You respond instead of react.
- You create from overflow, not obligation.
