Uplifted Living
Uplifted Living is a podcast for thoughtful, growth-oriented people who want to live with more clarity, intention, and presence—without burnout or overwhelm.
Each episode offers grounded reflections, practical insights, and gentle reframes to help you simplify self-development, reconnect with what matters, and make steady, sustainable progress in your life.
This is not a podcast about hustle, perfection, or constant optimization.
It’s a space for learning, slowing down, and becoming someone you trust—one small step at a time.
If you’re seeking growth that feels aligned, meaningful, and human,
you’re welcome here.
Uplifted Living
You're Resting. But You're Not Recovering. Here's the Difference.
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You wouldn't debate whether your phone deserves to charge. So why do you debate it for yourself?
In this episode, we talk about rest — not as a reward you earn, not as a sign of laziness, but as a structural requirement for any system that's meant to keep performing. Including you.
We look at why guilt around rest isn't a moral compass — it's a wiring problem. And more importantly, how to start fixing it.
In this episode: • Why physical stillness and actual recovery aren't always the same thing • The difference between a power outage and a charging port — and why collapsing from exhaustion doesn't count as rest • How a dysregulated nervous system quietly sabotages your self-trust and your ability to grow • Three anchors to help you rest in a way that actually works
The Three Anchors:
🔋 Anchor 1 — Name what kind of empty you are. Physical, cognitive, or emotional depletion each require a different kind of rest. Matching the right rest to the right kind of empty is the starting point.
🔋 Anchor 2 — The Charging Port Practice. One small, deliberate, 20-minute window each day — non-productive, non-consuming, just replenishing. This is maintenance, not indulgence.
🔋 Anchor 3 — Rest as nervous system input, not reward. A regulated nervous system is the condition under which growth, self-trust, and clear thinking are even possible. Rest isn't the pause before the work. It is the work.
"You are not a machine that earns rest. You're a battery. And batteries are allowed to charge."
If this episode landed for you, share it with someone who needs the reminder. Follow Uplifted Living wherever you listen — new episodes drop every week.
Think about the last time your phone hit 2%. You didn't debate it. You didn't wonder if you deserved to charge it. You didn't think I should probably push through. I've been charging it too much lately. You just plugged it in. No guilt, no negotiation, no internal committee meeting about whether it had earned the electricity. You plugged it in because a phone at 2% isn't useful to anyone, including you. Now I want you to think about the last time you hit 2%. What did you do with that? Why do we extend to our devices a kind of care we almost never extend to ourselves? It's a wiring problem. And like most wiring problems, it can be fixed. You are not a machine that earns rest. You're a battery, and batteries are allowed to charge. Welcome back to Uplifted Living. I'm Nick Gilbert. This is season two, episode three. There's a question I've been sitting with for a while, and it's this: why do we extend to our devices a kind of care we almost never extend to ourselves? Think about how automatic it is. Battery low, you act. No hesitation, no moral debate about whether you've earned it, no voice in the back of your head saying, other phones can manage, why can't you? But when we are low, genuinely depleted, running on fumes, past the point where we're actually useful to anyone, we tend to do one of two things. We either push through anyway, because stopping feels like falling behind, or we rest, but we don't actually rest because the guilt follows us in. And here's the thing I want to pull on today. That guilt, the one that shows up the moment you sit down or close the laptop or step away from the work, that guilt is not a moral compass. It's not telling you something true about your character or your work ethic or how serious you are. It's a wiring problem. And like most wiring problems, it can be fixed, but not overnight, not dramatically, but steadily, which I think is the only way we do anything around here. I'm calling today's episode the charging port. Here's the frame: you are not a machine that produces, you are a battery that discharges and recharges. And if you only ever discharge, if you run from a hundred to zero and then try to operate at zero, you don't get productivity, you get damage. Most of us know some version of this already. We've heard the fill your own cup so many times it's almost lost its meaning. It's almost lost all of its meaning. We know it, and we still don't do it. Not really. So today, I don't want to just tell you to rest more. I want to talk about why the guilt is there, what it's actually made of, and what it would take to plug yourself in without the internal negotiation every single time. Because I think the answer is more specific and more useful than anything you've heard on this before. I want to tell you about a specific season. I won't date it too precisely, but there was a stretch where I was running on what I now understand was between somewhere around three and eight percent. Basically, all the time. I had systems, I had routines, I had a list of things I was doing, and I was doing them. But I had normalized the depletion so completely that I couldn't even identify it anymore. I thought that that low hum of exhaustion, that constant background static was just what showing up felt like. That it was the price of being serious. And I would rest, technically, I'd sleep, I'd take weekends, but it never really recharged anything. Because the moment I sat down, the drafting started again. The reviewing of conversations, the calculating of how far behind I was, the body was still, the nervous system was not. And what I eventually understood, not from a book, but from an honest conversation with someone I trust, is that rest isn't the absence of activity. Rest is the presence of recovery. And those are not the same thing. You can be completely physically still and not recovering. And you can recover while doing something that looks from the outside like nothing at all. The version of rest our culture defaults to collapsing because we have no choice left, and then grinding through the guilt of having collapsed, that's not a charging port. That's a power outage. A power outage isn't rest, it's your system shutting down because you didn't give it what it needed. And now it's taking what it needs by force. And the difference between choosing to plug in deliberately, without guilt, as a practice, and being forced offline by your own nervous system, that difference is everything. Here's the head fake I want to offer, and I want you to actually sit with it. Most of us think of rest as the opposite of progress. You're either moving forward or you're resting, either in the game or on the bench. But what if rest isn't the bench? What if rest is the work? Not the pause between the sessions, not the reward at the end, the actual work. Every system that performs consistently, biological, mechanical, ecological, has recovery built in. Not as a reward, not as something you earn when you've done enough, as a structural requirement. You don't earn the right to charge your phone. The charge is just necessary. For it to do what it's meant to do, same is true for you. You are not a machine that earns rest, you are a living system. Act like it. I'd like to offer three things that are practical, specific, and none of them require a spa day or a week away from your life. Anchor one. Not all depletion is the same. And if you try to rest without knowing what you're actually recovering from, you often end up doing the wrong kind of rest, and then wondering why you still feel depleted after. There are three kinds of empty that matter here. Physical empty. Your body is tired, muscles, sleep debt, the kind of exhaustion that sits in your back and your eyes. You know this one. Sleep, stillness, movement counterintuitively. This is the one most people recognize. Number two is cognitive empty. Your mind is full. Too many tabs are open. Too many decisions, inputs, half-finished thoughts. The remedy here isn't sleep, it's space. Silence, boredom, even a walk without a podcast, a meal without your phone. Not more input, less. The third is emotional empty. You've been giving something of yourself to people and situations around you, and the account is overdrawn. This is one of the trickiest to name because it doesn't feel like tiredness, it feels like distance, flatness, a quiet irritability. You can't fully trace back to anything. Here's the practice. When you notice you're running low, before you decide what rest looks like, just ask which kind? Not all three, just the loudest one right now. And then rest at that frequency. Because a phone at 2% doesn't need a new case, it needs the charger that matches its port. The next one is short and practical. Then the third is where I want to spend a little more time. So anchor two, the charging port practice. Small, deliberately small. Find one 20-minute window in your day, ideally at the same time each day, where you are not producing anything, not consuming content that requires processing, not mid-task, not resting while mentally reviewing your to-do list, just replenishing. What that looks like is entirely personal. A walk, sitting somewhere quiet with something warm, reading something that has nothing to do with growth or output. Whatever genuinely brings your system back online. The specific activity matters less than the commitment that this window exists, that it is yours, that you don't negotiate it away when things get busy, because things will always be busy, and that's exactly when you need the charge the most. And when the guilt shows up, because it will, here's what I want you to say to it. This is maintenance, not indulgence, not laziness, not falling behind. Maintenance. You don't need to either. Both of those things get harder, significantly harder. When your nervous system is dysregulated, when you're running on cortisol, when your brain has been in low-level threat scan mode because it's been operating on empty for too long. The calm, clear sense of self, the self-trust that lets you stay in your own lane, read your own progress accurately, and actually feel the update installing that requires a regulated system underneath it. You can install a software update on a dead phone. Rest isn't the reward you get after you've done enough. It's the condition under which you're able to do the work at all. Which means giving yourself permission to rest isn't just self-care, it's strategy. It's how you stay in the game long enough to actually reach the version of yourself you're building toward. Even when you rest, part of your brain is tracking the list, the thing you said wrong, the progress you're not making fast enough, the version of yourself you haven't become yet. You're not lazy. You have never been lazy. That's not even in the building with you. But the drive that makes you someone who shows up consistently, that same drive doesn't have an off switch. And so rest has become something you do badly, guiltily, partially, and then feel worse about than if you just kept going. And I want to be honest with you about something that pattern, the half-rest, the guilty rest, the always on baseline, that is not strength. I know it has the texture of strength. I know it feels like discipline and commitment and seriousness, but a phone that never fully charges starts to lose capacity over time. Slowly. So slowly you don't notice it happening. 100% becomes 94%, then 87%. Then you notice one day that you just can't hold the charge the way you used to, that the sessions are shorter, that the recovery takes longer, that something that used to feel energizing now just feels like another obligation. What you're doing right now, listening to this, sitting with the idea that you might deserve more than a half rest, that is not small. That's the part of you that already knows something needs to change. That's the signal. And you don't have to overhaul everything. You don't have to go on a retreat, you don't have to redesign your entire life this week. You just need the port. Guilt-free 20 minutes, a deliberate, protected, guilt-free 20 minutes. Start here. That's genuinely enough. At the end of season one, we let go of the sandbags, the hot air balloon rising slowly as the guilt and the pressure and the constant push dropped away one by one. And I said at the start of season two that we begin in the float. That unfamiliar, quieter altitude where you're figuring out what it looks like from up here, what you actually want, who you actually are when the weight is gone. Three episodes in, here's what I want to add. You cannot navigate from up here if you're running on empty. You can do the identity lag work, learning to trust that the update is installing, even when you can't feel it. You can put down the comparison mirror, learning to navigate by your own instruments instead of someone else's reflection. But all of that requires a functioning system underneath it, a regulated nervous system, a battery that has something in it. Rest isn't a distraction from the season we're building, it's the infrastructure of it. And I think there's something worth sitting with here. In the bigger frame of what this podcast has always been about, the world tells you that rest is what you earn, that you plug in when you've done enough, that the charge is the reward for the output. But that's exactly backwards. You plug in so that the work can be real, so that the version of yourself you're becoming has a system that can actually hold the new identity when it arrives. You can't install the update on a dead phone. So this week, just one thing. Find the port, protect the 20 minutes, and when the guilt shows up, and it will, let it sit in the room while you rest anyway. Because a charged phone is more useful than a guilty one. Thank you for being here this week. If today's episode landed for you, share it with someone who needs the reminder. Someone who's been giving everything and hasn't plugged in for a while. Follow the show wherever you listen. New episode in two weeks. Not in a performative way. Actually,