Lessons from Ancient Wisdom, Modern Sanity, and Maybe Mario Kart
As an ADHD entrepreneur, you’re probably familiar with the GO GO GO lifestyle. Ideas ping around your brain like caffeinated squirrels, deadlines lurk around every corner, and your to-do list looks more like a novella. Productivity culture practically worships the grind, and for people with ADHD, it can feel like you have to work twice as hard just to keep up. The temptation to skip taking a day off? Huge. But hear me out: not only is a day of rest non-negotiable for your mental health and creativity, but it’s also a practice deeply rooted in ancient wisdom—like, say, the Bible.
Yep, we’re going biblical for a minute. Hang with me.
The Biblical Case for Rest: It’s Divine
In the creation story (Genesis 2:2-3), God works for six days to create the universe and then, on the seventh day, takes a break. He doesn’t do this because He’s burnt out (I mean, He’s omnipotent), but because rest is part of the natural rhythm of life. It’s sacred. It’s intentional. And it’s a commandment.
The Fourth Commandment literally says, “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.” (Exodus 20:8). This wasn’t just about spiritual reflection; it was also a mandate to hit pause, reset, and reconnect with what truly matters. Even God was like, “Hey, take a day, humans—you’re not built for nonstop hustle.”
So, if the Big Boss upstairs thought rest was important enough to make it law, why are you (a mere mortal with ADHD, no less) trying to outwork God? Cheeky, aren’t we?
ADHD Brains and the Need for a Hard Stop
Let’s bring it back to the present. ADHD brains are wired for bursts of hyperfocus and creativity, but they also burn out fast if we don’t hit pause. When you’re stuck in a constant grind, you’re not giving your brain the downtime it needs to process ideas, make connections, or replenish its executive function reserves. That “all-nighter energy” might feel productive, but it’s actually just your prefrontal cortex waving a tiny white flag while your dopamine system hijacks the show. Spoiler: That’s not sustainable.
When you rest, especially for an entire day, you’re allowing your brain to do what it does best: wander. Wandering sparks creativity, reduces stress, and restores your ability to make decisions. Plus, it helps you avoid the burnout spiral that can leave you bedridden on a random Tuesday because you didn’t pace yourself. ADHD brains need boundaries—yes, even from our own ambitions.
Back when I was a software engineer, there was a bug in my program I just couldn’t figure out. I was spending hours trying to solve it, with a headache getting more intense by the minute. I finally said, “screw this,” and left the office. I went to the arcade to play Defender and Donkey Kong (Yes, this was in the mid-eighties). No sooner did I put my quarter into the machine than the solution came rushing into my head!
The Entrepreneurial Grind Myth
“But if I take a day off, my business will implode!”
No, it won’t. Let me lovingly call out this lie we all tell ourselves. Taking one day off per week will not wreck your startup, sabotage your clients, or put you on the fast track to obscurity. In fact, it’ll probably make you a better entrepreneur.
The world’s most successful business leaders often schedule rest. They know that constantly working leads to diminishing returns. When you’re rested, you think better. You innovate better. You’re less likely to snap at your team or send a typo-ridden email that says “Pubic Relations” instead of “Public Relations.” (Oops.)
For ADHD entrepreneurs, a day off gives you the space to reflect on big-picture goals instead of obsessing over every single task. You come back refreshed, re-energized, and ready to channel that creative ADHD magic into something meaningful.
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