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productivity-guilt
Rest isn't laziness. Recovery is work. How to stop feeling guilty when you're not being "productive."
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Rest isn't laziness. Recovery is work. How to stop feeling guilty when you're not being "productive."
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
| name | productivity-guilt |
| description | Rest isn't laziness. Recovery is work. How to stop feeling guilty when you're not being "productive." |
Productivity guilt is the voice that says:
The truth: This voice is lying. Rest is not a reward for productivity — it's a requirement for it.
Somewhere you learned:
This is broken. It leads to:
Rest is what makes work sustainable.
| Without Rest | With Rest |
|---|---|
| Declining output | Sustained output |
| Resentment | Engagement |
| Burnout | Longevity |
| Guilt while resting | Actual recovery |
You're not being unproductive by resting. You're being productive over a longer time horizon.
Rest is not a reward. It's maintenance.
You don't earn sleep. You don't earn eating. You don't earn rest.
These are requirements for functioning. Treating them as rewards creates a cycle where you never feel like you've done "enough" to deserve them.
Feeling guilty doesn't mean you're doing something wrong.
Guilt is often just:
The feeling is real. The message is often false.
Read whichever one you need:
Did you survive? Did you not make things worse? That's something. Not every day needs to be a highlight reel. Some days are just days.
You could also be burning out. You could also be doing hollow work that feels productive but isn't. You could also be recovering so tomorrow you actually do good work.
Hours worked is a terrible metric. Output and sustainability matter more. Someone who works 4 focused hours beats someone who works 10 distracted hours.
Are you though? Laziness is avoiding necessary work you're capable of doing. Resting when depleted is not laziness — it's maintenance.
Some do. Some burn out. Some pretend. Some have different circumstances, support systems, or definitions of "work." Their path is not your benchmark.
You're resting, but the guilt is ruining it.
Try:
You rested, now you feel bad about it.
Try:
You want to rest but feel like you can't.
Try:
Working tired:
Low quality work → Rework needed → More hours → More tired → Lower quality → (spiral)
Resting when needed:
Recovery → Higher quality work → Less rework → Sustainable pace → Better output over time
You're not saving time by skipping rest. You're borrowing against your future capacity.
| Productivity Guilt | Procrastination |
|---|---|
| Resting but feeling bad | Avoiding something specific |
| Often after doing enough | Often before doing the thing |
| Need permission to rest | Need momentum to start |
| Rest would help | Rest is the avoidance |
These are different problems. Make sure you're solving the right one.
Old: "I'm only valuable when I'm producing."
New: "I'm a human who needs rest to function. Resting is part of functioning. I can rest without guilt because rest is not the opposite of productivity — it's a component of it."
If you passed most of these: you're allowed to rest.
When helping someone with productivity guilt: