TLDR: In this brief but potent reflection from Plum Village's Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet course, Sister Peace and Dr. Larry Ward reframe rest not as laziness or indulgence, but as an act of political resistance. When we rest, we interrupt the capitalist conditioning that compels us toward endless consumption, shopping, and productivity—a system that extracts value from both our inner worlds and the lives of those most harmed by exploitation. Rest becomes a practice of refusal: a rejection of the mindset that our worth is measured by what we produce or consume.
What does it mean to call rest "resistance"?
In mainstream capitalist culture, rest is often framed as a luxury, a reward for productivity, or something to feel guilty about. Rest is resistance rejects this framing entirely. Instead, rest is positioned as an active choice to step out of the system that demands constant consumption and output. When we rest, we withdraw our participation from the machinery of perpetual spending and achievement. This withdrawal is not passive—it is a deliberate refusal.
Sister Peace and Dr. Larry Ward emphasize that this resistance operates on multiple levels. First, rest resists the psychological conditioning that tells us we must always be doing, buying, or pursuing. The modern consumer-oriented world has trained us to fill empty time with consumption: shopping, scrolling, acquiring. Rest interrupts that loop. It says: I will be still. I will not spend. I will not hustle. In doing so, the resting person becomes a small but real obstacle to the system that profits from their constant motion.
How does capitalist conditioning colonize our relationship to rest?
The conditioning described in this teaching is not accidental—it is systematic. Capitalist economies depend on consumption and productivity. They need us to feel that our value lies in what we produce and what we buy. From childhood onward, we are trained to believe that leisure time should be filled with purchases, that success means constant activity, that stopping is wasteful or selfish.
This conditioning becomes so normalized that many people experience genuine anxiety when they rest. Rest triggers guilt, restlessness, or the compulsive urge to fill the silence with shopping, entertainment, or work. The system has colonized not just our time but our psychology. We believe that rest is something we have not earned, or that it is time wasted that could be spent making money or acquiring things.
The teaching suggests that to simply rest—without guilt, without rushing to fill the void—is already an act of defiance. It breaks the spell that tells us our worth is conditional on constant productivity and consumption.
Who benefits from keeping us in constant motion?
The framework offered here connects personal rest to systemic harm. The capitalist mindset that demands our constant productivity and consumption does not affect everyone equally. Those most exploited by "systems of harm and extraction"—workers in supply chains, communities living near extractive industries, marginalized populations bearing the costs of overconsumption—experience the burden of this system most severely.
When we rest, we also withdraw from participating in the extraction that sustains consumer culture. We step out of a machine that depends on the labor and resources of others to fuel endless consumption. The practice of rest, then, carries a dimension of solidarity: by refusing to consume compulsively, we reduce demand for goods produced through exploitation.
How does rest relate to inner peace and mindfulness?
This teaching emerges from Plum Village, a monastic community rooted in Thich Nhat Hanh's engaged Buddhism. In that tradition, rest and mindfulness are inseparable. True rest is not unconsciousness or escape—it is mindful presence. When we rest mindfully, we are fully there, not ruminating about what we should be doing or what we should buy next. We are present to our breath, our body, the moment itself.
This quality of rest cultivates inner peace. It is peace not built on the fantasy that we have "earned" it through productivity, but peace that arises simply from stopping, from allowing ourselves to be. This peace is radical because it does not depend on the system; it does not require consumption or achievement to feel valid.
What does "taking mindful action for our Earth" have to do with rest?
The larger course context—Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet—suggests that rest and environmental action are linked. To take mindful action for the Earth requires clarity, energy, and vision that cannot be maintained in a state of burnout. Activists and engaged people often work themselves to exhaustion, replicating the very culture of overwork and extraction they are trying to heal. Rest becomes necessary for sustainable action.
Moreover, mindful action for the Earth often means reducing consumption and resisting the pull to buy more, travel more, extract more. In this sense, rest—sitting quietly, finding contentment without new purchases, refusing the siren song of constant productivity—is itself a form of Earth action. It models and practices the restraint, sufficiency, and care that a healthier relationship with our planet requires.
Where to go from here
To explore these ideas more deeply, consider registering for Plum Village's full online course, Zen and the Art of Saving the Planet (ZASP), where Sister Peace and Dr. Larry Ward offer extended teachings on rest, mindfulness, and engaged action. The course site (plumvillage.org/courses/zen-and-the-art-of-saving-the-planet) provides registration details and further resources.
On a personal level, you might experiment with rest as a practice: designate a period—an hour, an afternoon, a day—where you deliberately refrain from consumption, shopping, or productivity-oriented activity. Notice the urges that arise. Notice the narratives about guilt, laziness, or wasted time. Simply observe them. In that observation and refusal to act on the urge to consume or produce, you are practicing exactly what this teaching describes. Rest becomes both a contemplative practice and a small political act.




