Publisher's Synopsis
Do Nothing isn't a guidebook.
It's a collection of ten reflections written after the noise of full-time work subsided - and something else began to surface.
It's not quite a memoir. It's not really self-help.
But it's full of memories. And it might actually help.
It's also not a book about retirement - though for the author, the noticing only began when retirement did.
These pages hold space for what lingers:
Moments of rest that feel unearned.
Habits you don't remember choosing.
A gentler rhythm beneath the reflex to perform.
No lessons, no steps. Just fragments of recognition.
For readers in transition, in recovery from urgency, or simply curious about what's left when the proving pauses, Do Nothing offers a subtle invitation:
To notice more.
To hold less.
To stop mistaking momentum for meaning.