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Why is it so hard to 'switch off' from work?

The Straits Times

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September 15, 2025

An injury put the writer on bed rest for weeks, and it forced her to relearn the true meaning of rest.

- Lianne Chia

Why is it so hard to 'switch off' from work?

It had been a busy few weeks at work, and it was about to get worse. I was covering for a colleague on leave and was set to work two consecutive Sundays on top of my usual weekday duties. I had steeled myself for a long, hard slog — and I was constantly on edge.

Then, the day before I started my work week, it happened. I bent over to pick up some clothes on the floor — and felt a pop in my back, followed by sudden, excruciating pain.

As a young (or so I thought) thirty-something, I optimistically assumed it was a muscle strain that would go away with a few hours of rest. But hours later, I still couldn't straighten my back much less walk. I was forced to accept reality: This wasn't ordinary.

I reluctantly headed to the hospital, where I discovered a spinal disc injury. And as the doctor bluntly told me, I wasn't going anywhere, least of all to work. It was a hospital stay, followed by bed rest for at least the next few weeks.

Some part of me probably knew this. But my mind was in overdrive. I had to work the next day — a Sunday — and the rest of the week. Who was going to cover for me? Perhaps I could work from my hospital bed? Could I get my laptop sent over?

In short, I was in denial. Big time.

WHY COULDN'T I SWITCH OFF?

Going from a state of all-out frenzied activity to total rest might seem fairly extreme. But how many of us are having the same trouble on a smaller scale, on a regular basis?

With technology and work-from-home arrangements increasingly blurring the boundaries between our work and home lives, we may think nothing of quickly shooting off an e-mail or work-related message after hours or while we're on leave.

It won't take us long, we reason, to respond to something — and we won't be greeted by an overflowing inbox when we return.

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