When a computer is idling, nothing useful happens. It doesn’t improve, it doesn’t solve problems, it doesn’t create value — it doesn't gain anything from idling — it simply consumes less energy. If that’s the goal, then idling makes sense — but why keep a machine running only to save energy? The point of turning it on is to use it for meaningful work.
You are the same. You are alive, “turned on”, already consuming energy. To choose rest as a strategy just to preserve that energy is the most inefficient use of your existence. Life isn’t meant to be idled away.
If you direct your energy into the most meaningful actions — into your growth, your purpose, your contribution — then every moment becomes valuable. You progress, you become stronger, and your life impacts others.
Look around: the modern world is not suffering from a shortage of energy. It’s suffering from a shortage of purpose. That’s what makes people idle — machines with power but no meaningful software running. The solution isn’t to save energy. It’s to direct it where it matters. 

