Why Mental Exhaustion Is Not Always About Sleep
Research in cognitive neuroscience suggests that mental fatigue often comes not from doing too much — but from switching attention too often.
SLOW LIVING · WELL-BEING
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Words Whitney Vence
Researcher in neuroscience and well-being, exploring rituals, aesthetics, and mindful living.
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The conversation started over coffee. A friend looked at me and said something I suspect millions of people have said at least once this year: “I’m tired, but I don’t know why.”
She wasn’t overworked. She wasn’t running a marathon. She wasn’t surviving on three hours of sleep and questionable life choices. Nothing dramatic had happened. Yet she looked genuinely exhausted.
Strangely, I knew exactly what she meant. I’ve felt it too. The kind of fatigue that doesn’t show up on a fitness tracker. The kind that survives weekends, vacations, and occasionally even a full night’s sleep.
You wake up tired. You go to bed tired. And somewhere in between, you wonder whether adulthood is simply an elaborate endurance sport.
At first, I assumed the problem was obvious. Too much work. Too little rest. Case closed. But the more I paid attention, the less convincing that explanation became.
Some of my most exhausting days weren’t particularly difficult. No crisis. No deadlines. No major decisions. Just emails. Messages. Tabs. Notifications.
Tiny interruptions arriving with the consistency of New York taxis and the subtlety of a marching band. Nothing important on its own. Yet somehow, by evening, my brain felt like it had spent the entire day crossing six lanes of traffic.
That observation sent me down a fascinating rabbit hole of research on attention, cognitive switching, mental fatigue, and the hidden cost of living in a world where almost everything competes for our focus.
What I discovered changed the way I think about exhaustion. Because sometimes the brain isn’t tired because we did too much. It’s tired because it never had the chance to stay anywhere long enough to rest.
A few weeks later, I started paying attention to how often I switched tasks during a normal day. The answer was slightly horrifying.
In less than twenty minutes, I managed to check my email, answer a message, open three browser tabs, read half an article, abandon all three tabs, and forget what I was originally trying to do. My brain wasn’t working. It was pinballing.
Why So Many People Wake Up Tired
Most people assume fatigue comes from a lack of sleep. Sometimes it does. But many people wake up after seven or eight hours in bed and still feel mentally exhausted.
The reason is surprisingly simple. The brain does not become tired only from activity. It also becomes tired from constant switching.
Every notification. Every tab. Every unfinished thought. Every decision. Each one asks the brain to redirect attention. And attention is one of the most expensive resources the brain has.
1. The Brain Pays a Price Every Time It Switches
Researchers call it cognitive switching. Moving between tasks feels effortless.
In reality, the brain is repeatedly stopping one process and activating another. This creates a hidden energy cost. The more frequently attention changes direction, the more mental energy is consumed.
By the end of the day many people feel tired not because they worked hard. But because their attention never settled.
It’s the cognitive equivalent of trying to eat lunch, answer emails, take a phone call, order a coffee, and hail a taxi at the same time. Technically possible. Surprisingly expensive.

Attention switching feels effortless. The brain quietly pays the bill later.
2. Why Scrolling Feels Relaxing — Until It Doesn’t
Scrolling creates a strange illusion. It feels like rest because we are not actively working. Yet the brain remains highly engaged. New image. New headline. New emotion. New decision. Again and again.
The result is stimulation without restoration. The body remains still. The nervous system does not. This is why many people finish thirty minutes of scrolling feeling more depleted than before.
3. The Difference Between Stimulation and Restoration
Not everything enjoyable is restorative. This distinction matters. Some activities stimulate the brain. Others restore it. Stimulation feels exciting. Restoration feels calming.
Reading a book. Coloring. Walking slowly. Journaling. Watching clouds move across the sky. These activities ask less from the brain. And because they ask less, they give more back.

Restoration begins when stimulation ends.
4. Why Repetition Calms the Mind
The brain loves novelty. But the nervous system loves predictability. This is why repetitive activities often feel surprisingly comforting. Coloring. Knitting. Painting. Writing by hand. Preparing tea.
The action becomes familiar. The brain stops anticipating change. Mental noise begins to fade. The body shifts into a calmer state.
This is one reason repetitive creative practices are increasingly studied as tools for stress reduction and emotional regulation.
5. Your Brain May Need a Different Kind of Rest
Many people try to solve every form of exhaustion with sleep. But not all fatigue is physical. Sometimes the brain needs: less stimulation, fewer decisions, more beauty, more structure, more silence, more creativity.
The challenge is that different people restore energy in different ways. What works for one person may leave another feeling depleted. Understanding your personal recovery style can change everything.

A rested mind is simply attention that finally found a place to stay.
From My Journal
After researching this article, I realized my brain wasn’t necessarily asking for more rest. It was asking for fewer interruptions. So lately I’ve been experimenting.
Nothing dramatic. No retreat in the mountains. No deleting all technology and moving into a cabin with a typewriter.
I’ve simply started grouping similar tasks together instead of bouncing between ten different things every twenty minutes. Emails at one time. Writing at another. Research in its own space. It turns out my attention appreciates a schedule almost as much as my calendar does.
I’ve also become slightly more protective of the quiet moments in my day. Less checking. Less switching. Less convincing myself that opening one more tab is somehow a productive life choice.
Has it solved everything? Not even close. My brain still occasionally behaves like an overenthusiastic tourist trying to visit every attraction in Manhattan before lunch. But the mental noise has become noticeably quieter. And that feels like a good place to start.
Over the next month, I’m continuing the experiment and tracking what happens when I reduce attention switching even further. I’ll share what I discover in a future article.
My suspicion is that the solution to modern exhaustion may be far simpler than most of us think.
A Different Kind of Recovery
One thing I’ve learned while researching stress, attention, and recovery is that there is no universal recipe for feeling restored. Some people recharge through movement. Others through solitude. Some need creativity, while others need beauty, structure, conversation, or simply a little more quiet.
The challenge is that many of us spend years trying to follow someone else’s version of well-being instead of understanding our own.
If you’re curious about what genuinely helps your mind recover and restore energy, you might enjoy taking my science-inspired assessment:
→ How Does Your Brain Restore Itself?
It’s designed to help you identify the environments, habits, and experiences that may support your natural recovery style.
And if your attention feels particularly crowded lately, there is one small ritual that has quietly become part of my own evenings. A cup of tea. A few markers. Fifteen uninterrupted minutes away from screens. Nothing ambitious. Nothing optimized. Just enough space for my mind to stop behaving like a browser with thirty tabs open.
If that sounds appealing, you may enjoy the Bold & Easy: For a Quiet Mind coloring books.
They were created for exactly those moments when the brain doesn’t need more information, more productivity, or more stimulation. Just a little room to breathe.
📚 References & Inspiration
This article draws on research in cognitive neuroscience, attention restoration theory, decision fatigue, and studies on mental fatigue and attentional switching.
⚠️ Disclaimer
This content is provided for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute medical, psychological, or professional advice.
Malkiele does not provide healthcare services. Any references to mental well-being, stress reduction, or neurological effects are based on publicly available research and are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any condition.
Always consult a qualified healthcare professional regarding any medical or mental health concerns.