Reclaiming Our Divine Right to Lay Down: A Manifesto
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Average rating4.1
'Dreaming of a world that includes justice for all those sleep-deprived, exhausted and caught up in the hustle and shenanigans of white supremacy and capitalism. May we have space to navigate our lives from a liberated rest state. May all of culture slow down. The time to rest is now'. - The Nap Ministry By founder and creator of The Nap Ministry, Rest is Resistance is a call-to-action for anyone suffering from the toxic urgency of modern-day life. It centres around the systemic issues that cause us to overwork, and ultimately burn out, and offers us liberation through rest. In its simplest form, rest becomes an act of resistance and a reclaiming of power because it disrupts and pushes back against capitalism and white supremacy. Slowing down moves us away from trying to operate at machine levels of productivity, to make us all more human. In this fierce and tender manifesto, Tricia Hersey, aka The Nap Bishop, elevates rest as a divine right, and paves the way towards a more well-rested life that empower imagination, invention and healing. Divided into four sections, Rest is Resistance will explain Tricia's philosophy and methods, and will include both storytelling and practical advice. It will offer you the guidance and context to craft a rest practice for long-term health, both within yourself and society as a whole. Rest is Resistance is not self-care: it is the urgent wake-up call you need to nap, rest and, most importantly, dream once more.
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Like many folks, I came to know Hersey from The Nap Ministry (for me, on Instagam). This is definitely a manifesto, though for me it also reads like a sermon, and a polemic (against white supremecy and unbridled capitalism). In some ways, I "shouldn't" like this book--there's a lot of talk about praying and god (not my thing); it's got a structure like a sermon--it meanders and doesn't give the reader a lot of steady handholds. It's repetative. And yet all of these things that would usually be a negative for me work really well for what she's trying to accomplish: A strong, long-term, complex shift in thinking about our world, through the lens of what rest means for human beings. I
I loved it. Highly recommend.