Rest in Peace

I’ve been working with a 34-year-old CEO for the last 18 months.

In this time, we streamlined operations, improved revenue and margins, and —most importantly— built a team aligned to clear targets and numbers.

During this period, he’s also been rushed to the hospital three times. 

Not because the business is failing —it’s healthier than ever.
But because his own ambition doesn’t let him slow down.

This last time, I visited him at the hospital. His wife walked in, calm, almost casual.
It surprised me —she’s usually warm and affectionate, always attentive.

So I asked her quietly, “Are you ok?”

She nodded. “Yes… this has become usual. There’s nothing wrong with him. This is just the only way he seems to allow himself to rest.

Whoa.
Think about that.
For him, rest equals collapse. He cannot give himself permission to stop unless he lands in a hospital bed.

And he’s not alone.

I know founders who feel guilty if they sleep eight hours.
They carry the weight of expectation —so much to do, so much to prove— that rest feels like weakness.

I’ve been there too.
For years, I believed rest was wasted time, until I saw how it fuels creativity, clarity, and better decisions.

Now, I treat rest as more important than work itself.
Because work without rest isn’t work —it’s self-sabotage.

And when I lie down at night, my mantra is simple: “Rest in peace”
Not at the end of life, but at the end of each day. This reminds me to release today’s struggles now and find renewal —while we’re still alive.

Why Rest is Strategy, Not Weakness

We’re taught that harder work = better results. But that’s not entirely true.

  • A factory running 24/7 without breaks doesn’t produce more, it breaks down.
  • A cricket player training nonstop doesn’t become the best, they burn out.
  • And founders who never rest? They don’t scale, they stall.

There is always an optimal effort window. Push beyond it, and your output —and your judgment— decline sharply.

One sharp decision can save you years.
One tired decision can cost you years.

Rest isn’t the opposite of work.
It’s what makes great work possible.

Because exhaustion doesn’t just hurt you, it multiplies into your team. Tired leaders build tired cultures. Rested leaders build resilience across the company.

Make Rest Productive

Here’s how to actually design rest:

  1. Find your peak window.
    Notice when you make your best decisions and protect those hours.
    Everything else can wait.

  2. Experiment with rest.
    For some, it’s stillness. For others, movement. And for others, connection.
    Choose what brings you back renewed.

  3. Silence the inner critic.
    When your mind tells you “you’re not doing enough,” don’t believe it.
    That voice isn’t driving you—it’s draining you.

  4. Practice the mantra.
    Tonight, when you lie down, whisper to yourself: Rest in peace.
    Not as weakness, but as renewal.

This isn’t theory. It’s what saved my client.

He blocked 90 minutes every morning for deep work. That sense of progress lowered his anxiety.

He carved out 45 minutes in the evenings to work out — it helped him release the day and mark a clear end to work.

And before bed, he listed tomorrow’s priorities. Writing it down gave him permission to fully rest.

Rest is very personal. There’s no single formula for it.

But the point here is: find your way to rest before your body forces it on you. A small routine shift — like a morning block or an evening ritual — creates compounding clarity. Miss it, and the compounding goes the other way.

The Founder’s Edge

You don’t build scale through overwork.
You build it through clarity, creativity, and consistent execution.

Rest is what keeps you sharp enough to design, decide, and delegate—so your company grows without crushing you.

That’s why inside Founder’s Freedom Blueprint, I guide founders to redesign their energy, time, and systems—so they scale sustainably, without running themselves into the ground.

My top content from last week

Last week, I shared why narrowing down isn’t risky — it’s leverage.

It resonated with many founders because focus feels counterintuitive, yet it’s the key to building trust, clarity, and scale.

Read it here.

📚 From My Bookshelf

Actionable insights from books that transformed me and how I built.

Book: The Obstacle Is the Way

Every founder knows the feeling of constant firefighting.
Cash tight. Team energy dipping. Clients unpredictable.
The instinct is to move faster. Do more.

But Ryan Holiday shows the real edge is stoic leadership —controlling your response, not the storm.

This book shifted how I see obstacles: not as detours, but as the path.
I wrote an article distilling its biggest lessons, including ten stoic reminders every founder can use to lead with calm in chaos.

Read the article here.

Here’s a list of all books I have shared on this newsletter so far.

See you next Thursday,
Surabhi

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