If Rest Feels Hard, This Might Be Why

restless evening, insomnia

For many people, rest doesn’t feel restorative.
It feels unsettlinganxiety-provoking, or even dangerous.

You sit down. Your chest tightens.
You stop working. Your thoughts race.
You try to rest. Guilt, panic, or numbness rush in.

When you’ve experienced trauma, rest can feel unsafe. Because at one point, it was.

For many trauma survivors, growth has always meant effort: improving, fixing, proving, staying ahead. This is especially true for perfectionists, high achievers, and people who struggle with impostor syndrome.

But trauma doesn’t heal through force.
It heals through safety.

And safety is most often learned not in motion, but in moments of pause.

Picture of a woman with her brain lit up: Nervous system trauma

Trauma Trains the Nervous System to Stay Alert

Trauma isn’t just what happened to you.
It’s what your nervous system learned to do to survive.

During trauma, the body often learns:

  • Stillness = vulnerability
  • Slowing down = danger
  • Letting your guard down = loss of control

So your system adapts. It becomes vigilant. Scanning. Ready.

Even long after the threat has passed, your body may still live by this rule:

“If I stop, something bad will happen.”

That’s not a mindset problem.
It’s a survival memory stored in the body.

The notebook of a perfectionist full of scrambeld papers and the word perfectionist scratched

When Perfectionism Is a Trauma Response

Perfectionism is often misunderstood as ambition or high standards.

But for many trauma survivors, perfectionism is protection.

It says:

  • If I do everything right, I won’t be hurt.
  • If I don’t make mistakes, I won’t be rejected.
  • If I stay in control, I’ll be safe.

Rest threatens this strategy.

Because rest removes:

  • Constant self-monitoring
  • Performance as protection
  • The illusion of control

So the nervous system resists it. Not because rest is bad, but because perfectionism once kept you safe.

Imposter syndrome: a note saying: am i a fraud?

Impostor Syndrome Keeps the System Activated

Impostor syndrome isn’t just self-doubt.

At a deeper level, it sounds like:

  • If I stop trying, I’ll be exposed.
  • If I relax, people will realize I don’t belong here.
  • I can’t afford to rest. I haven’t earned my place.

For people with trauma histories, especially those who grew up needing to:

  • Be “easy”
  • Be exceptional
  • Be invisible or impressive

Rest feels like risking everything.

So staying busy, productive, and self-critical becomes a form of armor.

The perfectionist scale going further than excellent

Why Calm Can Feel Threatening to High Achievers

Here’s one of the most counterintuitive truths in trauma psychology:

A nervous system shaped by stress often experiences calm as danger.

When your baseline has been pressure or unpredictability:

  • Silence can feel loud
  • Stillness can feel exposing
  • Calm can feel like something is “wrong”

This is why many perfectionists say:

“I don’t know how to relax.”
“I feel guilty when I’m not doing something.”

That’s not a personal failure.
It’s conditioning.

Survival responses: fight flight freeze or fawn

When Rest Triggers Freeze or Shutdown

For some people, stopping doesn’t bring peace. It brings collapse.

You may notice:

  • Numbness
  • Fog
  • A heavy, stuck feeling

This is the freeze response: a survival state that once helped you endure when action wasn’t possible.

For high-functioning people, this can feel terrifying:

“If I stop, I won’t be able to start again.”

So the nervous system chooses constant motion instead.

nurturing a seedling into a plant. the stages of growth

Why Rest Can Bring the Most Growth

Growth doesn’t only happen through effort or insight.
For a traumatized nervous system, growth happens when the body learns it can stop, and still be okay.

When rest is introduced gently and safely, several powerful shifts occur:

1) Rest Creates a Corrective Experience

Each pause that doesn’t end in danger teaches the body something new:
stillness without punishment, calm without collapse.

This is neurobiological learning, not positive thinking.

2) Rest Allows Integration (Not Just Coping)

Perfectionism excels at coping.
Rest allows integration: emotions, memories, and meaning coming back together.

If feelings surface during rest, it’s not regression.
It’s processing.

3) Capacity Grows in Recovery, Not Performance

Just like muscles grow during recovery, nervous systems expand during safe rest, not relentless activation.

Learning to rest without panic is not indulgent.
It’s a developmental milestone.

4) Rest Rewrites Identity

Trauma often ties worth to output:

  • I am valuable because I perform.
  • I am safe because I stay useful.

Rest challenges this, and creates a new identity:
worth without productivity, safety without vigilance, belonging without proving.

That shift is deep growth.

Man carrying a giant rock on his shoulders. Concept of a heavy burden. Compensating, masking, the illusion of high functioning but drowning and struggling.

Guilt Around Rest Is Trauma-Based

Many perfectionists learned early:

  • Rest had to be earned
  • Needs were inconvenient
  • Being “good” meant being useful

So rest triggers guilt, shame, or urgency.

That guilt isn’t truth.
It’s a learned nervous system response.

Woman putting hand on her heart and another on her belly doing breathing exercises

Healing Isn’t Forcing Rest. It’s Expanding Safety

Healing doesn’t mean suddenly relaxing or letting go of standards.

It means slowly teaching the nervous system that safety doesn’t depend on effort anymore.

Gentle ways to begin

  • Choose active rest (walking, gentle movement)
  • Allow short moments of rest. Not long stretches
  • Pair rest with safety cues (warmth, music, familiarity)

Rest doesn’t have to be still.
It just has to feel non-threatening.

Brain filled with flower. representing mental health and healthy surroundings. accommodations and healthy workplace.

A Short Exercise: Rest for Perfectionists (3–5 minutes)

Purpose: Practice pausing without losing control.

  1. Sit upright with your feet on the floor. Keep your eyes open.
  2. Press your feet gently into the ground for 10 seconds.
  3. Release the pressure.
  4. Relax as many muscles in your body as possible for 10 seconds.
  5. Ask yourself: Is anything unsafe right now?
  6. Stay paused for 10-30 seconds.
  7. Choose when to end the exercise.

Choice is safety.
This is how trust is rebuilt.

Synapses Neuroplasticity Neuropathways Brain Plasticity Brain Training

You’re Not Failing at Rest. You’re Learning It

If rest feels unsafe, it means:

  • Your perfectionism once protected you
  • Your impostor syndrome helped you survive
  • Your nervous system adapted brilliantly

Healing isn’t about removing those strategies overnight.
It’s about updating them.

Not all growth looks like striving.
Some of the deepest growth looks like exhale.

And if rest feels hard, you’re not broken.
You’re standing at the edge of a nervous system, learning something new.

Woman gives herself a bear hug

Ready to Gently Relearn Rest?

If this resonates, you don’t have to do this alone.

👉 Book a 1:1 session

You don’t need to earn rest.
You need to feel safe enough to allow it. 🌱

About the Author

Ilse Gevaert is a psychologist and coach specializing in neurodiversity (such as Autism and ADHD), giftedness, twice-exceptionality (2e), trauma, recovery from narcissistic abuse, and resilience.

She holds a Harvard specialization in Leadership and Management, as well as a certificate in Women in Leadership from Cornell University.

👉 Book a 1-hour private online session: One-on-One Online Session

👉 Or book your free 15-minute consult here: ilse.resilientminds@gmail.com

Ilse is the founder of the Resilient Minds Blog, a free self-help psychology blog.

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restless evening, insomnia

If Rest Feels Hard, This Might Be Why

For many people, rest doesn’t feel restorative.It feels unsettling, anxiety-provoking, or even dangerous. You sit down. Your chest tightens.You stop working. Your thoughts race.You try to rest. Guilt,

Read More »
Summary
If Rest Feels Hard, This Might Be Why
Article Name
If Rest Feels Hard, This Might Be Why
Description
If resting feels harder than working, your body learned to feel safe through effort. Healing begins when slowing down becomes safe, not forced.
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