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The beginning of the year is often expected to feel energising and motivating. Yet for many people, the new year arrives with a very different emotional mix: lingering fatigue, pressure to โ€œget back on track,โ€ unmet goals, and the quiet sense that rest somehow fell behind expectations.

At this point, a common question emerges:
Are rest and work opposing forces, or can they actually complement each other?

The answer is more complex โ€” and more human โ€” than it seems.

The Invisible Fatigue We Carry Into the New Year

Even after the holidays, many people start the year already feeling tired. The transition back into routines, expectations to perform, new goals, and unresolved stress from the previous year can quietly accumulate.

This early-year exhaustion may show up as:

  • Difficulty concentrating
  • Irritability or low tolerance for stress
  • Feeling overwhelmed or โ€œbehindโ€
  • Emotional disconnection or functioning on auto-pilot
  • Reduced enjoyment in daily life

When this happens, rest is no longer optional โ€” it becomes a psychological necessity.

Rest Is a Tool, Not a Reward

From a mental health perspective, rest is part of the productive process, not the opposite of it.

Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy (REBT) helps us notice rigid beliefs such as:

โ€œI should be more motivated by nowโ€
โ€œI shouldnโ€™t still feel tiredโ€

These expectations often create unnecessary pressure and self-criticism. Softening them allows us to prioritise realistically โ€” without guilt.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) reminds us that two things can be true at once:

  • I want to be responsible and productive
  • I also need rest to sustain myself

This balance helps us avoid extremes โ€” overworking or disengaging โ€” and instead move forward more effectively.

Rest supports:

  • Clearer decision-making
  • Reduced emotional reactivity
  • Restored creativity
  • Sustainable productivity
  • Burnout prevention

Do Work and Rest Complement Each Other?

Yes โ€” when we allow them to coexist intentionally.

This involves:

  • Accepting that momentum doesnโ€™t always come first โ€” sometimes recovery does
  • Letting go of unrealistic timelines
  • Respecting personal limits without judgment
  • Allowing the body and mind to find their rhythm

DBT refers to this asย effective action โ€” acting from a balanced state, not from exhaustion. REBT reminds us that wellbeing improves when we release absolutist demands about how weย should feel or perform.

When Rest and Work Feel in Conflict

At times, rest can feel impossible because work demands keep piling up. But often, the conflict isnโ€™t between rest and work โ€” itโ€™s between our real limits and the belief thatย we canโ€™t slow down.

Ignoring rest may increase:

  • Stress
  • Loss of motivation
  • Concentration difficulties
  • Emotional distancing

Acknowledging our needs doesnโ€™t make us less capable. It makes us more human โ€” and, ultimately, more effective.

A More Sustainable Start to the Year

Instead of pushing through the new year on empty, it may help to ask:

  • What truly needs my energy right now โ€” and what can wait?
  • What can I simplify, delegate, or approach differently?
  • What kind of rest do I need at this stage: mental, physical, emotional, or social?
  • Which rigid beliefs might be increasing pressure unnecessarily? (REBT)
  • How can I balance responsibility with self-care more compassionately? (DBT)

Conclusion: Rest and Work Are Not Enemies

Work gives structure and direction.

Rest provides clarity and resilience.

They need each other.

A healthy start to the year isnโ€™t defined by how fast we move forward, but by how sustainably we do so โ€” combining action with pause, and productivity with care.

If You Need Support, Iโ€™m Here for You

If the start of this year feels heavier than expected, or if finding balance between responsibilities and wellbeing has become challenging, support can help. I work with Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy, Dialectical Behavior Therapy, and brief evidence-based approaches to help you move forward with clarity and balance.

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Written by Berenice Barrios Cruz, Psychologist

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