You made it to the break... but you didn't really stop, did you?
You closed your gradebook, sent the last student email, maybe even said, "Now I can finally rest."
And ten minutes later you were on your laptop again, updating the syllabus, checking HR for contract news, scrolling job boards "just in case."
That's not laziness. That's not bad time management.
That's the quiet survival logic Robert Kegan called an immunity to change, the inner system that keeps you busy so you don't have to feel how insecure the system has made you.
The Adjunct's Pause is a short holiday field guide for academics, lecturers, researchers and other knowledge workers who know they need to slow down but feel guilty when they do. It's meant to be read in one sitting, between semesters, on a train ride, or in the half hour before everyone else wakes up.
Inside, you'll:
- spot the pattern that keeps you working when no one is asking
- map your own "I'll fall behind if I rest" story
- learn how to watch your defenses in real time (not just in theory)
- run one tiny, safe experiment to prove to yourself that nothing breaks when you pause
This isn't a productivity book. It's a self-authorship book.
It helps you move from proving your worth inside the system to designing a life that reflects it.
At the end of the book you can download free companion worksheets - the Map of Resistance, the Tiny Win Tracker, and the Rhythm Builder - so you can keep the pause alive when January turns loud again.
If you're an academic on a temporary contract, an adjunct who "should be further by now," or simply someone whose brain can't stop working even when the office is closed, this book will give you something better than motivation: permission.