Sleeping in
Photo by Zohre Nemati on Unsplash
Over the holiday period I’ve fallen into the habit of sleeping till 9 or 9:30 – some 90 minutes longer than my usual routine. For the pats few days, I set my alarm for the normal hour, but hit the off-button and go back to sleep. This feels indulgent, borderline sinful, most certainly lazy.
On the night of 1 January, my husband and I settled in to watch The Big Lebowski.
It was an individual favorite when we met; since then, it has become a totem for our relationship – a source of private idiom and in-jokes on loop.
The opening voice-over informs us that the Dude was a lazy man. What a contrast, I thought, to the expectations a new year brings.
Resolutions
New Year arrives with a cultural imperative to improve. What are your new year’s resolutions?
The noun resolution, in this sense, alludes to a determined wish, or decision.
It is worth remembering that another definition of resolution is ending, or conclusion.
Linguistically, all unwitting, we start the new year by demanding conclusions.
Is it any wonder they fail to materialize?
If there is one thing writing teaches it is that you cannot force a conclusion. They are reached by patience, effort and serendipity.
Let it be
The Big Lebowski is a tale of serendipity.
Sheer coincidence brings together two characters who clumsily try to exploit their chance encounter. The lostness of this cause is what makes the film funny; the universality of the impulse to connive and manipulate makes it poignant.
That The Dude comes off better in the end has nothing to do with effort and everything to do with his ability to, in moments of crisis, tune out and go bowling.

Photo by Persnickety Prints on Unsplash
The other foot
As a stone type A, with a self-perpetuating to-do list I love Jeff Bridge’s character because The Dude is my antithesis.
Worry… it’s how I stay in shape, poet Maggie Smith writes in ‘Let’s not begin’.
Me too.
I crave resolutions – the conclusion kind – and if one isn’t plain I’ll fret all day and toss and turn all night, trying to wrestle one into being. If I can’t see how a thing will turn out, I’ll manufacture an ending, toss a match to see what sparks.
Wearing out
This leads to plenty of fractured nights, followed by days where tiredness clouds my senses like swamp gas. The demons of weariness are legion: irritability, forgetfulness, poor hand-eye coordination, binge eating, anxiety, tearfulness. If I get less than eight or, preferably, nine hours, they swarm – shattering my mood, judgment and productivity.
Given my love of ticking items off a list, you’d think that alone would be enough to ensure I got enough rest, but something in my wiring (Puritan genes + protestant upbringing perhaps) gibes me to try harder.
One of the first rational things lost when I’m tired is the ability to admit I need a break.
Instead, I try to fix myself by doing more.
“I’m almost done…”
My husband has heard these words too many times to count. They are always a lie. He’s learned to spot them for what they are: a self-sabotaging effort to put my life and spirit in order by crossing off one more line on my to-do list.
Being the partner of a perpetual fixer must be a massive drag. The nearest I got was a long-running infatuation with a man who refused to date me because he had to much to do. At the time, I thought it was a terrible, bogus excuse. We stayed friends, though, and now I’m grateful to have someone who understands the ridiculous compulsion to seek solace in busy-ness.
Even The Dude falls into this trap, lamenting that his thinking had gotten very uptight.
Corridors without doors
When I get tired, my brain ceases to create and wallows in endless grooves. Instead of romping through fields of possibility, it marches along grim, fluorescent-lit corridors without doors. Inspiration and joy are things that happen to other people, in other places; for me, the grindstone, the factory clock; the slow treadmill.
This is lethal for my writing, and sense of self.
As someone who struggles to stay ahead of clinical depression, self-care is essential. Skimping on sleep is the first domino; next come exercise, eating, socializing, work, creating. Then the need to do more panic kicks in and flattens what is left of a painstakingly built structure.
Do less, accomplish more
My guilt at “over”-sleeping is rooted in a real fear that it’ll turn me lazy, like my good friend The Dude. Life is no movie, my brain chides. In the real world, the other Lebowski was right – you gotta get a job.
Yet this fixation with being busy is, as many wise souls have remarked, antithetical to actual accomplishment. Presenteeism is malingering for suck-ups. Most of the things I busy myself with, from house cleaning to answering email, have little bearing on the things that bring me satisfaction and joy. These things – reading, writing, time with my husband – get shoved into corners and fed scraps of my energy and attention.
Fail again
Instead of resolutions, I made a list of new year’s goals. It felt good to write them down, better to fantasize about completing them.
The next day, I woke under a cloud: sad, drained, mind blank. After drinking coffee, I got back into bed and cried for no explicable reason.
It felt like I’d put too much of myself on that page. Once again, I was looking for validation in tasks, instead of being open to what a new year might bring.

Photo by Stijn te Strake on Unsplash
Start simple
Later, my husband and I went for a walk. The sky was bright and the air smelled of wood smoke and bales of sweet straw. We said hello to cows and picked windfall apples. The world began to resume its correct proportions. Cresting another hill, I realized it was time to edit the new year’s goals: sleep, move, eat, love. Everything else will come.
How will you honor yourself this year?