The Brain at Rest: How the Art and Science of Doing Nothing Can Improve Your Life
Joseph Jebelli. Dutton, $32 (288p) ISBN 978-0-593-47464-8
Rest can foster creativity, problem-solving skills, and empathy, according to this informative and approachable guide from neuroscientist Jebelli (In Pursuit of Memory). He explains how quieting the brain’s executive network gives free rein to its default network, which is made up of neurons that “enables us to daydream, mind wander, think reflectively, and imagine the future.” Resting is especially vital in today’s culture of overproductivity, where overwork is degrading brain structures and leaving people stressed, exhausted, unfocused, and more vulnerable to health problems (one study Jebelli cites suggests that long working hours cause an estimated 745,000 deaths a year, a 29% jump from 2000). Readers can find relief with commonsense practices, like getting outside, sleeping enough, or taking naps (he also suggests more unique ways of taking breaks, from forest bathing in Japan to the Dutch practice of deliberate idleness called niksen). Cogent neuroscience buttresses the author’s points, and his message gains particular resonance from his family’s struggles with work-life balance. (Jebelli’s father, an Iranian immigrant working as a computer programmer in Great Britain, had a mental breakdown after two decades of stress and burnout, was diagnosed with major depressive disorder, and never worked again.) Even the most devoted workaholics will be persuaded to take a breather. (June)
Details
Reviewed on: 05/16/2025
Genre: Nonfiction
Hardcover - 288 pages - 978-1-0390-0898-4