Est. 2012

Why “Bed Rotting” Is Actually Good for You (In Moderation)

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Gen Z made “bed rotting” viral—spending entire Sundays in bed with snacks, shows, and zero guilt. Critics called it lazy. Therapists called it essential. The nuance: active rest vs. avoidance. One day of horizontal recovery after a brutal week resets your nervous system. Three days signals depression. The healthy version has rules: no phones, no work thoughts, and a hard stop by Monday morning. When practiced intentionally, bed rotting lowers cortisol and boosts creativity. The new wisdom: rest isn’t earned. It’s scheduled.

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June 3, 2026