What Counts as a ‘Rest Day’ (and How Often You Need Them)

Rest days are an important part of any workout routine, since they help you to save your energy for future training days. But what counts as rest, exactly—do you need to avoid all exercise? I’ll break down the purpose of these days and answer your questions about what does and doesn’t count.

What is the purpose of rest days?

People say a lot of things about rest days that aren’t really true, so I’d like to take a minute to separate myths from facts. 

Rest days actually do the following: 

  • They balance your workload. Your body can handle three hard workouts in a week if you balance that by giving it four rest days. Note that the number and type of rest days depends on how hard the work days are. If you did six days of relatively easy workouts, one rest day each week would be plenty. 

  • They help you fit exercise into your schedule. Most people can’t hit the gym every day, just because we have other things to do with our lives. A three-day exercise program (with, yep, four rest days) is a lot easier for most of us to stick to than a six-day one.

  • They take the guesswork out of “easy” days. If your program told you to alternate hard and easy days, you might find yourself working too hard on the easy days. But if it’s a complete rest day, you just don’t show up to the gym, and now you know for sure you aren’t doing too much. 

Now let’s talk about some things that rest days are often said to do, but that aren’t actually true: 

  • They don’t prevent injury. Balancing your total workload can help to prevent injury, but as we discussed, rest days are one tool that can help in that balance. There are ways to safely exercise without rest days. 

  • They aren’t necessary for muscle growth. It’s sometimes said that your muscles “recover” or “grow” when you’re resting, but keep in mind that if you do a one-hour workout every day, your muscles have 23 hours to rest before the next one. 

  • They don’t allow full recovery. The results of your workout take days to weeks for your body to fully recover from. We don’t wait for full recovery each time, or else we’d never get on a consistent schedule and never make any progress in training. Your muscles (and other body systems) can work even when they’re not fully recovered—within reason, of course. 

When should I take rest days? 

This depends on your training program. Any good training program, whether you get it from an experienced coach or download it from the internet, should be designed with a good balance of work and rest. 

If you’re designing your own routine, here are some guidelines to help you know where to put the rest days. These are not ironclad laws, and lots of good programs will do things differently. But these are helpful rules of thumb to get you started: 

  • In a strength training program, each muscle group should get a rest day after being worked for 1 to 2 days. That could mean a full-body strength program where you lift Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, or a split where you do upper body Monday and Thursday, lower body Tuesday and Friday, and rest Wednesday and the weekend. 

  • In a running or cardio program, beginners should get a rest day after 1 to 2 consecutive workout days. That allows for a Monday/Wednesday/Friday schedule, which is very popular for beginners. 

  • For people with more experience, an easy day can take the place of a rest day. For example, a runner might run five days a week, but only two of those are hard workouts and the other two are easy jogs.

  • It’s OK to do two workouts on consecutive days, so long as your total work/rest balance stays the same. For example, if you can’t do your Wednesday workout and you end up running on Monday, Thursday, and Friday, that’s OK because you still have four rest days this week.

Above all, if you’re writing or modifying a program for yourself, listen to your body. It’s unwise to jump into a five-day-a-week plan when you don’t normally exercise at all. It’s much better to start with three days, see how that goes, then consider adding more workouts and adjusting their intensity.

What should happen on a rest day? 

Keeping the purposes of rest days in mind, you want to make sure that your rest day accomplishes what it’s meant to accomplish. 

In a strength training program, your rest days should give you a break from any serious strength training. That doesn’t mean you need to sit on the couch all day, but it does mean that you probably shouldn’t do squats again if you just did squats yesterday. 

On a rest day, you may keep up your baseline level of activity. If you normally get 8,000 steps, you can still take 8,000 steps. If you normally walk your dog, you can still walk your dog. If you work a job that has you on your feet or moving equipment all day, you can still go to work and do your job. You don’t literally have to rest, you just have to keep your activity to your baseline level. 

Can I do strength training when I’m resting from cardio, and vice versa? 

Once you get used to it, yes. Strength training and cardio are different enough that they don’t give your body the same kinds of stress. In fact, lifters who do cardio may find that the cardio helps their muscles to recover. And runners who add some strength training may find that the benefits outweigh the lost rest time. 

Beginners should approach this cautiously, though. If you’re doing couch to 5K and coming from a literal couch-potato life, give yourself a few weeks to get used to the new schedule before adding in some beginner-level strength training. 

That said, remember to listen to your body. If you’re a relatively active person, and you’ve just started strength training, you may not find it fatigues you at all to add a little light jogging. Just pay attention to how that goes, and make adjustments as needed. 

Consider keeping “hard days hard and easy days easy” 

Here’s another not-ironclad rule: some coaches advise that it’s better to stack two workouts on a “hard” day to free up some rest time on a different day. That could mean doing a run and a strength workout on Tuesday so that you can take a true rest day on Wednesday. If you’ve been ramping up your exercise volume and find yourself longing for a rest day, try this approach and see if it feels better to you. 

Can I walk on my rest days? 

Yes, because walking is light enough exercise that it’s not likely to fatigue you too much for the training to come. If you don’t normally walk much, start with just a short walk and see how that goes. If you normally walk a lot, you can pretty much walk any amount you want on your rest days. 

Can I do yoga on my rest days? 

Yes, if you keep it relatively light compared to your harder workout days. A rest day is a good time for gentle flexibility work, light strength work, and just keeping your body moving a bit. If you feel like your yoga session does that, perfect. 

I would only recommend not doing yoga on a rest day if your idea of yoga is a really tough power yoga class, or if it involves an extreme level of stretching. In that case, you should classify it as a hard workout and make sure that you get some rest from those hard workouts as well.

Can I do “active recovery” on my rest days? 

Depends what that means to you, but probably! Mobility work, foam rolling, light yoga, walking, and easy swimming can all fall under the umbrella of “active recovery.” Just remember that active recovery isn’t defined by what kind of thing you do, but by how hard it is on your body. If you’re a swimmer and find it relaxing to do a few easy laps, then yes, that can absolutely be a recovery activity. But if you’re new to swimming, and you find yourself flailing in the water gasping for breath, that is not a recovery activity. Use a little common sense and you’ll be able to figure it out.

U.S. Department of Agriculture Announces 15 Additional States Onboard With National Milk Testing Strategy for H5N1, Shares Update on Vaccination Efforts

WASHINGTON, Jan. 08, 2025 – Today, the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) announced that 15 additional states have enrolled in the National Milk Testing Strategy, bringing the total number of states to 28 in roughly one month since the program launched. These 28 states represent nearly 65% of the nation’s milk production.

USDA Announces Grants and Technical Assistance Funding for Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production

WASHINGTON, Jan. 8, 2025 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is providing a total of $14.4 million in grants and technical assistance through two separately funded projects to support urban agriculture and innovative production. USDA’s Office of Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production (OUAIP) is making available $2.5 million for Urban Agriculture and Innovative Production (UAIP) grants, building on $53.7 million invested in UAIP grant projects by OUAIP since 2020.

The Out-of-Touch Adults’ Guide to Kid Culture: What Is a ‘Treatler?’

This week, young adults are calling each other “treatler,” vowing to show up at the beach with a full bush in a bikini, and playing an online game that has been heavily censored by China. Read on to unpack all this, plus learn why goats like to jump in fire.

Who (or what) is “Treatler?”

“Treatler” and “Treatlerite” are online insults that combine “treat” and “Hitler.” They refer to the entitlement of some users of services like Doordash or Uber Eats, specifically people who seem to regard luxury delivery services as a human right, and don’t consider the hardships of the people who do the work that makes “private taxis for burritos” possible.

The term “treatlerite” was coined by X user @posting_forever, and is becoming online shorthand for the type of person who files an angry report when the Instacart driver buys the wrong brand of ice cream. The argument gets deeper when you consider that many disabled people say they rely on these services. But is this a good argument? Some say, “nope.”

There’s nothing new about having a pizza delivered, but the widespread use of services like DoorDash and Grubhub has created a new class of gig workers, but we don’t usually think about the corresponding “upper class” of people wealthy enough to pay someone else to go grocery shopping for them. It’s interesting how the new upper class has exactly the same problem with this as their old-school counterparts. Weighing “I’m paying a lot for this, so I expect good service” with “the people I pay to do my menial tasks are worthy of respect too” has never been easy, and thanks to capitalism, young people are trying to make it make sense without having been born into a wealthy family.

Why is everyone talking about “full bush in a bikini?”

TikTok user sujindah signaled the possible future of seaside grooming habits this week by posting a video of her repeating the phrase “full bush in a bikini:”

The video has been played over 13 million times in the past three days, and commenters are vowing to go “full werewolf feral” this summer.

Sujindah credits an Etsy review of a bikini, “where the girl had a full bush,” for “radicalizing” her on the topic. “That’s how it should be!” she says.

I’m sure many of you reading this are old enough to remember when every bikini contained a full bush, so there’s nothing new under the sun, but it’s encouraging when young women look at societal beauty expectations and say, “I’m not gonna do it, and you can’t make me.”

What’s up with Jerkmate Ranked?

While young women are vowing to not clear the brush before their trip to Kauai, young men are making jokes about jerking it, specifically, “Jerkmate ranked,” or “competitive gooning.”

Gooning, as defined by me in my guide to Gen Z and Gen Alpha slang, refers to extended masturbation without orgasm. Jerkmate is an adult website that puts users in public chatrooms while they watch live streams, so the joke of “Jerkmate ranked” is that there is a competitive element to gooning. Meme-makers are posting sarcastic brags about their rank on Jerkmate, or imagining the rules of competitive gooning. Jerkmate doesn’t really offer ranked “matches,” but I wouldn’t be surprised if they were working on it at this moment.

Everyone is playing Marvel Rivals, but no one can mention Winnie the Pooh.

Marvel Rivals is the current must-play online game. Launched just over a month ago, the team-based PVP shooter set in the Marvel universe is the best-selling game on Steam (it’s free to download, so I guess that’s more like “most downloaded”) and the third most-played game on the streaming service. It lets gamers play as a Marvel character. The roster includes both well known heroes like Iron Man and Hulk, but also obscure Marvel creations like Squirrel Girl and Peni Parker.

Marvel Rivals is causing international controversy and highlighting China’s growing control over discourse in gaming and pop culture in general. Marvel Rivals was developed by China’s NetEase Games, and the game censors politically touchy language related to China in its chat. Captain America cannot type “Free Hong Kong” in a Marvel Rivals chat window, and Groot cannot respond with “Remember the Tiananmen Square Massacre!” Players can’t reference Winnie the Pooh (because of memes pointing out the characters resemblance to Chinese leader Xi Jinping) nor can they type “Taiwan is a country.” But you can type “911 was an inside job.”

Viral videos of the week: A goat jumps in a fire and Disney gingerbread horror

This week features two viral videos, because they’re short. The first was posted by Instagram user xiaoling5350, and it features seemingly suicidal goats jumping into a fireplace in someones’s living room. Even after being pulled out of the flames, the goats return to the inferno, as if intent on ending their life.

Along with jokes about self-cooking curry, many viewers of this video (including myself) wonder why a goat would jump into a fire repeatedly. Goats and fire have a deep relationship. Goats are famously happy to eat anything, so they can be used to prevent wildfires by setting them free to gobble up underbrush. But they seem to love flames: there are tons of videos of goats playing around with fire and reports of the animals creepily staring into campfires. The accepted explanation on the internet is that goats burn themselves to kill parasites in their fur or throat, but I’m not buying it. How often would wild goats have been close enough to fire to have developed this behavior, and wouldn’t being drawn to fire ultimately kill more goats than it helped? So I’d like to propose a second explanation: Goats are really stupid and don’t know no better.

The second viral video poses no questions about animal behavior; it’s just funny. TheMainStreetDuo are Disney fanatics who posted a hilariously simple video of an interaction during a Disneyland parade. While giant gingerbread men are walking by, half of the Main Street Duo takes a huge bite of a gingerbread man cookie, leading to horror. Not much too it, but it’s funny enough to have been viewed over a hundred million times.

How Long It Will (Probably) Take to Buy a House

From market conditions, to location, to your individual finances, the path to buying a home can look wildly different from person to person. (For a little snapshot of what that range can look like, consider a few of the first-time homebuyers I’ve interviewed).

According to October 2024 data from ICE Mortgage Technology, the average time to buy a house, from contract to closing, was 44 days. Of course, that timeline doesn’t factor in pre-purchases phases like setting your budget, figuring out where you want to live, and shopping for a place you actually want to buy. For instance, right now my mom is currently moving houses—right down the road, but still, a move is a move. I’ve followed along with her every step of the way, and her timeline has been an (anecdotally) far more typical four-to-six months from start to finish.

With the understanding that the process can vary significantly depending on your circumstances, here’s an easy-to-read timeline detailing how long most people can expect at each stage of the home-buying journey.

Stage 1: Pre-purchase preparation (1-2 months)

When you’re thinking about buying a home, there’s a lot that goes into the timeline before you even consider house-hunting. Let’s break it down.

Getting pre-approved (3-7 days)

A pre-approval letter is key to make your offer more attractive to sellers. It can also streamline the buying process, since being pre-approved can speed up the final loan approval once you’ve found a home you want to buy. Plus, the pre-approval process is prime time to uncover any problems with your credit or finances early on, giving you time to address them.

The pre-approval process involves:

  • Gathering financial documents (pay stubs, tax returns, bank statements)

  • Submitting a mortgage application

  • Having your credit checked

  • Receiving a pre-approval letter detailing how much you can borrow

Setting your budget and criteria (1-2 weeks)

One of the biggest challenges to home buying is figuring out exactly how much house you can reasonably afford. It’s crucial not to skip this step and to simply go with the number a bank gives you, as you probably don’t want to end up “house poor,” paying so much for your mortgage that you have little left over for other expenses and savings. The “25% rule of thumb” as a helpful, if conservative, guideline; under this calculation, you will aim to spend no more than 25% of your net monthly income on your mortgage and property taxes.

During this stage, you’ll:

  • Determine your comfortable monthly payment

  • Research target neighborhoods

  • Create a list of must-haves and nice-to-haves

  • Interview and select a real estate agent

Stage 2: House hunting (1-3 months)

This stage varies the most in duration, depending on market conditions and your specific requirements. During this phase, you’ll:

  • View multiple properties (often 10+ homes)

  • Attend open houses

  • Research comparable sales

  • Refine your criteria based on what you see

Once again, the current market conditions can significantly impacts this timeline. In a seller’s market, you might need to move quickly and make multiple offers before one is accepted.

Stage 3: Making an offer and negotiations (3-7 days)

Once you find “the one,” things start to move quickly, as you:

  • Submit your offer with pre-approval letter

  • Negotiate terms with the seller

  • Reach an agreement on price and conditions

  • Sign the purchase agreement

  • Submit earnest money deposit

Stage 4: Under contract period (30-45 days)

This is the most detail-oriented phase of the process, but a lot of the work will likely be handled by your attorney and your lender while you sign a lot of paperwork and email them for updates every few days. This stage involves:

Getting a home inspection (Week 1)

  • Schedule and complete inspection (2-4 hours)

  • Review inspection report (1-2 days)

  • Negotiate repairs or credits (2-5 days)

Make sure you save your home inspection report and turn it into a DIY to-do list after purchasing.

Bank appraisal (Weeks 1-2)

  • Lender orders appraisal

  • Appraiser visits property

  • Review and address any valuation issues

Mortgage processing (Weeks 1-4)

  • Submit additional documentation to lender

  • Underwriting review

  • Address any conditions or questions

  • Receive final loan approval

Title work (Weeks 2-3)

  • Title search conducted

  • Title insurance arranged

  • Property survey (if required)

  • Review of any deed restrictions or easements

Stage 5: Closing preparation (1 week)

The final stretch includes:

  • Final walk-through of the property

  • Review of closing disclosure

  • Arrangement of funds for closing

  • Scheduling closing time and location

Stage 6: Closing day (2-3 hours)

Congrats! You’re finally at the finish line. The big day involves:

  • Final document review and signing (a lot of signing)

  • Fund transfer

  • Key handover

  • Recording of new deed

Tips for staying on schedule when buying a house

There’s no shortage of circumstances that can lengthen the home-buying process. The appraisal could come in low, forcing you to renegotiate your offer, for example. Or the inspection could reveal issues with the property that requires extensive negotiations with the seller over who will pay for the repairs. You might also struggle to get your mortgage approved or face other bank delays.

With so much of the housing market outside your control, keep the process moving by staying on top of what you can control. Respond as soon as possible to all requests for documentation or signatures, and make sure you have your funds readily available when it’s time to close. And of course, even though we all should know certain terms, there’s no shame in a quick refresher of all the terms you need to know when buying a home so you can be more responsive and better informed when your attorney gives you the latest update.

Remember that while this timeline represents a typical home-buying process, every situation is unique. Working with experienced professionals and staying organized can help keep your purchase on track and minimize delays.

Eight Unexpectedly Useful Drill Attachments

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No matter how handy or non-handy you are, there’s a good chance you have a power drill somewhere in your home (honestly, it should be part of any basic tool chest). They’re useful for a wide range of DIY projects, from screwing together furniture to more involved projects.

If you’ve only used the standard bits that come with your basic power drill, you’re missing out on a lot of usefulness—your power drill can actually work like several tools in one. Some of these uses are obvious, like screwdriver bits or a paint mixing attachment, but there are some truly unexpected drill attachments out there that can make even the cheapest electric drill an incredibly versatile and useful tool.

Paint sprayer

Paint sprayers can make paint jobs much faster and much easier to tackle, resulting in a nice, smooth finish without the tedious process of recharging paint brushes and rollers continuously. But if you don’t need one often, or only have to deal with small paint projects, having a paint spraying attachment gives you the ability to do pro-level painting whenever you need to. You can see the paint sprayer in action in this video, where it does a pretty solid job without the commitment of a dedicated sprayer.

Roller dryer

Painting is one of the cheapest and easiest upgrades you can make to any room in your home, but cleanup can be a pain. That’s especially true for paint rollers, which become frustratingly saturated with paint. A paint roller cleaner attachment for your drill makes cleanup incredibly fast and easy. You can see the process in this video—you spin the roller in a bucket to force as much paint out as possible, then you spin it in a bucket of water. The end result? A perfectly clean roller ready for the next job.

Log splitter

If you’ve got a wood-burning fireplace or stove at home, you already know that splitting logs can be a literal pain in your back. A wood-splitting drill attachment like this one makes it much, much easier once you get the hang of it (you can see one in action here).

Vent cleaner

There are a lot of hard ways to clean your dryer vent (and a lot of very wrong ways), but it needs to be part of the basic maintenance you do on a regular basis if you want your dryer to keep functioning at peak efficiency (and last as long as possible). If you have a power drill, just buy a vent cleaning kit like this one and you can have sparkling, clean vents in no time.

Metal cutter

Cutting sheet metal with a pair of manual shears or snips can be a slow and even painful process (those edges are sharp), and cutting straight lines is a real challenge. A metal-cutting attachment like this one makes the job a lot easier. How much easier? Just watch a similar attachment slice through some sheet metal like butter in this video.

Reciprocating saw

Buying new power tools for one-time use is a waste of money, and even having a tool like a reciprocating saw on hand for the occasional need means you’ve got something taking up space and requiring maintenance with very little payoff. Believe it or not, you can buy an attachment that turns your drill into a very effective reciprocating saw, perfect for when you need to quickly saw through something in the middle of a project but don’t need to own a saw full-time.

Auger

Like to garden? Need to sink some fence posts? An auger attachment for your drill and your job just got a lot easier. Your drill can power surprisingly enormous augers, actually, though if you’re going to be doing heavy-duty fence post drilling you’ll probably be better off with a dedicated auger instead. But for gardening and the occasional post-sinking, a drill attachment is an economical and effective choice.

Pump

The worst time to realize that you really need a pump is when you really need a pump. Luckily, this attachment turns any power drill into a transfer pump capable of draining or transferring liquids through a standard garden hose. Whether you need to pump fuel out of a tank or get rid of some standing water, this little attachment can save you the trouble and cost of having a utility pump on hand.

CES 2025: This Dock Fixes the Mac Mini’s Power Button Problem

Amid all the weird and wonderful announcements at CES 2025, there is one accessory for an Apple product that caught my eye. Remember the M4 Mac mini’s awkwardly placed power button, which requires you to lift the device to power it on? It’s one of the most baffling design decisions Apple has ever made. Now, accessory maker Satechi has a solution for that

The company’s CES launches include the Mac Mini M4 Stand & Hub with SSD Enclosure, which has a cutout exactly where the Mac mini’s power button is located. This means that you can press the power button without moving the Mac mini all that much. The dock sits flush against the base of the Mac mini, and only raises the height of the device a little bit. That, coupled with the cutout, is enough to let you easily press the power button.

The Satechi dock has a USB-C cable that allows it to connect to the M4 Mac mini, which means that you’ll have to sacrifice one USB port on your computer to use this dock. It also has an SSD enclosure that lets you expand your Mac mini’s storage by up to 4TB. Additionally, it includes useful ports on the front—an SD card slot and three USB-A ports. (Every photographer will tell you that it’s incredibly convenient to not have to contort yourself to plug in an SD card.) Satechi claims that the aluminum dock has heat-dissipating vents that keep the device cool, but those claims remain untested at the moment.

This Satechi dock is scheduled to release in Spring 2025; there’s no price for it yet. If it’s priced well and works as advertised, then it may offer a nice alternative way to upgrade the storage on the new M4 Mac mini. Now, someone: Please make something as elegant to let me charge Apple’s Magic Mouse

Amazon Prime Members Can Get Two Free E-Books in January

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You can get thousands of free e-books over the course of 2025 if you know where—and when—to look. All year long, Amazon is offering up free Kindle e-books to readers, with new opportunities popping up every month. This month, Prime members can get two free Kindle e-books from Amazon’s First Reads program in January.

What is Amazon’s First Reads?

Amazon First Reads is a program aimed at Prime members that offers early access to new e-books across many genres, as curated by First Reads editors (one of your many Prime Member benefits). Prime members can choose to download one free e-book every month from a rotating list—though some months that number is bumped up to two—and non-members get them for a discounted price. These e-books can be read on any compatible Kindle device or via the free Kindle app.

How to get your free Amazon Kindle e-books in January

Go to the First Reads landing page to see the full list of e-books available this month. Once you find a book that seems interesting, click the “Shop Now” button from the First Reads landing page. Make sure you’re not being redirected to the Kindle or Amazon mobile application, because you won’t see the free book option there; instead, use your internet browser on your phone or computer.

Make sure you’re not clicking the ”Pre-order for…” button, as that will direct you to pay; instead, click the “Read for Free” or the “Buy Now with 1-Click” button under the “First Reads” banner on the book’s Amazon page (don’t worry, you won’t be charged). This will send the e-book directly to the Kindle linked to your Amazon account.

You can see what it should look like from the screenshot below.

Screenshot of Amazon page on phone from the web browser showing the "read for free" button.

Credit: Daniel Oropeza

You’ll know you did it right when you see a “Thanks, [your name]!” order summary indicating the e-book is being auto-delivered to the Kindle Cloud Reader.

Free Amazon Kindle e-books available in January 2025

This month, you can choose two from ten new Kindle e-books. Amazon notes the genre for each of the books above the title, offering a quick way to narrow down your options. If you hover over the “See Editor Notes” under the “Shop Now” button, you’ll be able to read a short description from the First Reads editor who picked the book.

Here are your options for January 2025. Choose two of these 10 e-books: