You are not lazy. You are not broken. You are exhausted from measuring your worth through productivity. Unlearning Productivity is a reflective self-help book for people who do everything right and still feel tired, misaligned, or quietly overwhelmed. If rest no longer feels restorative, if slowing down creates anxiety, or if success feels strangely empty, this book speaks to that experience. This is not a guide to quitting your job, doing less, or abandoning ambition. Unlearning Productivity explores the moment when productivity stops being a helpful tool and becomes an identity. When output turns into a measure of self-worth, belonging, and value. Modern culture teaches constant optimization. Time, habits, performance, even rest are treated as problems to be improved. Over time, productivity becomes a moral standard rather than a practical one. Many people internalize this without noticing the cost. Instead of offering productivity hacks or quick fixes, this book invites reflection. It helps readers recognize beliefs absorbed early in life and reinforced by modern work culture. Inside this book, you will explore: • Why rest often feels earned instead of natural • Why slowing down can feel uncomfortable or unsafe • How productivity becomes tied to self-worth • What remains when output is no longer the measure Written in a calm, thoughtful tone, Unlearning Productivity is for readers who care deeply, think critically, and sense that something essential has been lost in the pressure to keep up. This is not a book to rush through. It is a book to sit with, revisit, and reflect on. A book for anyone ready to question the pace of modern life and reconnect with value beyond productivity.