Tricia Hersey, founder of The Nap Ministry, speaks on stage during the Sept. 20 "Rest is Resistance" program held at Metropolitan African A.M.E Church, as part of the 2025 March On! Festival. (Courtesy of Purple PPL Media)

On the Saturday before Sunday service, people flocked to the historic Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal (A.M.E.) Church on Sept. 20 to tap into another spiritual practice: rest.

March On! Festival hosted โ€œNapping as Resistance: Rest as a Tool for Collective Liberation,โ€ led by Tricia Hersey, founder of the nationally recognized Nap Ministry and author of โ€œRest Is Resistance: A Manifestoโ€ (2022). Herseyโ€™s movement frames rest as a spiritual and practical necessity, a way for Black communities to reclaim dignity and healing in the face of generations of overwork. 

Drawing on church tradition and liberation theology, she invited participants to see rest as faithful resilience: a practice of care that resists capitalismโ€™s demand for endless labor and opens space for joy, imagination, and collective renewal.

โ€œIโ€™ve been leaning into the idea of speaking gratefulness over my body, over my spirit,โ€ Hersey told the crowd. โ€œThere’s so much to be afraid of, there’s so much fear going on right now, but I believe we have the power to slowly place ourselves in a temporary space of joy and freedom, which is resting.โ€

Audience members hold their hearts while Arin Maya plays a singing bowl and sings soothing melodies during the “Rest is Resistance” program as part of the March On! Festival. (Courtesy of Purple PPL Media)

Throughout the event, Hersey read passages from โ€œRest Is Resistance,โ€ blending scripture and lived experience into a call for radical self-care. 

She reflected on how exhaustion has weighed on Black communities for generations.

โ€œI always wonder what more our ancestors could have done with more rest,โ€ Hersey said.

Considering the many generations of African Americans who were forced into labor, and the socio-economic disparities Black people face today, Hersey views rest as both inheritance and resistanceโ€”a way to regain strength and carry justice work forward.

Emphasizing rest as a spiritual practice and act of political resistance, Hersey urged people to pause and collect themselves, deliberately reclaim their bodies and spirits from a culture built on overworking, and return renewed.

โ€œResting is a faith walk,โ€ she said. โ€œSocial-justice work is spiritual work, and spiritual work is political work. To say, especially as a Black person, โ€˜I refuse to be burned outโ€™ is a radical act of faith and a disruption of capitalism. My work is simply a pushbackโ€”a voice saying, โ€˜No. We can sleep. We must.โ€™โ€

Guided Meditation, Rest as a Pathway to Joy

The gathering included a guided daydreaming meditation led by artist Arin Maya. She filled the sanctuary with soft, sustained melodies, her voice mingling with the gentle resonance of a singing bowl. 

The bell-like tones invited participants to close their eyes, breathe deeply, and rest.

โ€œI grew up in churchโ€”Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago with Reverend Jeremiah A. Wright Jr.โ€”and in the theology of Black liberation. Thereโ€™s a song we used to sing: โ€˜What God has for Me is for Me,โ€™โ€ Maya told The Informer. โ€œIโ€™ve evolved that to: What I want for myself, God wants for me too. If Iโ€™m burned out, I need to rest and care for myselfโ€”thatโ€™s what God wants as well.โ€

Among those deeply moved was Cammie Ward, who said the gathering felt like a rare invitation to stop and breathe. 

โ€œThis event was amazingโ€”it moved me to tears,โ€ Ward reflected. โ€œHearing her voice over the sound system, it felt like permission to close my eyes and truly rest. I loved it.โ€

Ward connected the message to her own family history of overwork. 

โ€œRest is necessary for longevity. Not restingโ€”being overwhelmed and overworkedโ€”takes a real toll on the body. Iโ€™m 53, and seeing the trauma in my own family from parents who were constantly overworked truly frightened me,โ€ Ward said. โ€œBecause of that, I make sure to find time every day to crochet or simply sit still. Itโ€™s okay to just relax and rest.โ€

Mayaโ€™s views rest as closely tied to faith and underscored prioritizing it in oneโ€™s life, describing it as a pathway to joy: a practice that nurtures creativity and the strength to sustain resistance.

โ€œMy faith tells me God is an active player in creating my life, and Iโ€™m part of that creativity,โ€ she said. โ€œIf what I need is rest, God and I work together so I can receive it.โ€

The Inspiration Behind the Nap Ministry 

Before founding the Nap Ministry, Hersey spent years as a political activist, organizing direct actions and community campaigns. She remembers watching fellow organizers push themselves past the point of safety. 

โ€œIt also felt like a lot of times activists donโ€™t know how dangerous it is to be at protests and on frontlines with an exhausted brain,โ€ she told The Informer. โ€œWhen you are exhausted, when you are in burnout mode, it is a physical, spiritual thing happening in the body that really takes a toll on your thinking, takes a toll on your creativity, on your ability to be imaginative.โ€

Hersey had an up-close view of the power of prioritizing rest.ย 

 โ€œMy grandmother is the muse of all my work. She survived a lynching in Jackson, Mississippi, migrated to Chicago, andโ€”despite povertyโ€”rested every single day,โ€ she said. โ€œShe taught me what it means to rest inside a capitalist system.โ€

Further, Hersey notes that a celebrated activist ensured rest was part of her famous journeys to freedom.

 โ€œI love the story of Harriet Tubman pausing during Underground Railroad missions to nap and pray. Even in life-or-death situations, she stopped to dream and strategize,โ€ Hersey said. โ€œShe was never caught. That practice of rest is a model for activists today.โ€

In times of unrest, Hersey encourages people to make rest a priority. She pointed to todayโ€™s political landscapeโ€”marked by ongoing protests, social upheaval, and attacks on people of color and marginalized communities โ€”as fertile ground for exhaustion. 

โ€œPeople wake up every morning not knowing what theyโ€™re going to see. Anxiety and fear are everywhere. Resting right now is majorly important because all that fear can consume you,โ€ the author explained. โ€œBurnout only leads to more trauma, and that cycle weighs on our mental, physical, and spiritual health.โ€ 

Through the chaos of uncertaintyโ€”whether political, personal, or anything in betweenโ€”Hersey emphasized rest must be prioritized as a natural right of all people. Her work, she explained, โ€œjust hopes to be a calendar,โ€ meant to serve as a constant reminder to slow down and reclaim that right.

โ€œResting is a birthright, itโ€™s not a luxury,โ€ she said. โ€œI think that thereโ€™s a different reimagination that weโ€™re missing by not looking at resting as being part of the foundation for a liberated world.โ€

Trevor is an intern for The Washington Informer. Born in Alpharetta, Georgia, and raised in both Georgia and Nashville, Tennessee, Trevor is an economics and media graduate from Howard University. He is...

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