School of Midlife
15 weekends of summer. How are you spending them? Laurie counted them. There are 15 summer weekends this year — and the moment she did that, something shifted. Not because it changed anything. Because finite time does something very particular to high-achieving women: it turns enjoyment into management. This episode started as a thought on a walk and became something much bigger: an honest look at busyness as a drug, the habit of earning rest before allowing it, and why the discomfort of doing nothing might be the most useful information you get all summer. Laurie shares what she's been working through in real time: the Sunday she spent doing absolutely nothing while Mike was out of town, the guilt that followed, and the moment a quote from a keynote at Craft + Commerce hit her in the chest and put language to something she'd been feeling her whole life. Practical, honest, and a little uncomfortable in the best way. This one is for any woman who has ever felt like she needed to earn the weekend before she was allowed to enjoy it. What we cover * Why counting the summer weekends changes the way you experience them...and not always for the better * Parkinson's Law: why finite time makes us cram instead of savor, and what that costs us * The two problems with finite time: cramming it full, or feeling guilty for not cramming it full * The pattern Laurie has been running her whole life — Saturdays off, Sundays working — and why she never questioned it until now * The Sunday she did absolutely nothing, felt guilty about it, and what that revealed * Jay Papasan's keynote at Craft + Commerce and the quote that stopped her cold: "If busyness is your drug, rest will feel like stress." — Ian Simpkins * Why busyness works like a drug, and what the cost of that addiction actually is * Busyness as a hiding place: why staying in motion postpones the questions, the decisions, and the version of yourself that has things to deal with * The empty calendar question: if every obligation disappeared tomorrow, what would bubble up for you in the quiet? * Three things Laurie has been doing this summer — imperfectly — to practice actual rest * Why rest is a skill, not a reward * The question underneath all of it: who am I when I'm not busy? The three practices 1. Name it when the pattern shows up. Not out loud, not dramatically. Just notice: I'm reaching for my laptop because I feel like I should have something to show for this afternoon. That's it. See it. 2. Give the guilt somewhere to land. The guilt isn't about the rest. It's about the belief underneath: I'm only as valuable as what I produce. When the guilt arrives, get curious. Ask it: what are you trying to protect me from? What do you think will happen if I just sit here? 3. Start smaller than you think you need to. Not the whole weekend. Twenty minutes. No phone, no task, no optimization. Just twenty minutes with no agenda. Then notice: how long after those twenty minutes does it take before you reach for something to do? Quotable moments "The moment something becomes finite, you stop enjoying it and start managing it." "At some point the weekend becomes a production — and the question becomes, is this still a weekend, or is it just a different kind of work?" "If busyness is your drug, rest will feel like stress." — Ian Simpkins, shared by Jay Papasan at Craft + Commerce "The rest was always conditional. The play was always something I had to earn first." "The discomfort of being unproductive feels worse to me than the exhaustion of being overworked." "Busyness isn't just a habit. It can be a hiding place." "The busyness feels productive. But what it's actually producing is distance...from the questions, from the stillness, from the version of yourself that knows things you're not ready to deal with." "The rest isn't indulgent. It's information." "Rest is a skill. The first few times you try it, it's probably going to feel awful." "Who am I when I'm not busy? That's one of the most important questions a woman in midlife can ask herself." Resources + links mentioned * Last week's episode: Shoot Your Shot — Even When You'd Rather Look Away [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2147326/episodes/19352471] * Apply for the BEST LIFE Mastermind [https://www.schoolofmidlife.com] * Book a 15-minute call [https://calendly.com/laurie-reynoldson/best-life-mastermind-inquiry] with Laurie If this episode resonated, share it with the woman in your life who needs to hear it. And if you haven't already — subscribe, leave a five-star review, and know that Laurie reads every single one. 📩 JOIN MY MAILING LIST [https://www.schoolofmidlife.com/the-weekly-best-life-list-sign-u] https://www.schoolofmidlife.com/newsletter [https://www.schoolofmidlife.com/newsletter] 👉 CONNECT WITH LAURIE: 📩 Email Laurie [ laurie@schoolofmidlife.com] 💻 Website [https://www.schoolofmidlife.com] On Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/schoolofmidlife/] On LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/laurie-reynoldson-b28b921a/] Work with Laurie [https://www.schoolofmidlife.com/enroll]
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