
Somewhere between color-coded Google Calendars and the pressure to “make the most” of every moment, being busy has become a personality trait. On a campus where productivity is a necessity to get by, and college students rarely take breaks (except for nights at the bars…), it’s worth asking: are we actually busy, or just anxious? More importantly, when did exhaustion start to feel like an accomplishment?
A day driven by anxiety
For many students, the day doesn’t just start with a to-do list. A day in the life of an anxious and busy college student: You wake up already behind, even if nothing is technically due. That anxiety fuels a constant need to fill time: answering emails immediately, saying yes to plans you don’t even want to attend, stacking commitments until your schedule looks impressive enough to justify the stress. Even small moments of stillness can feel uncomfortable, like you should be doing something more.
But here’s the catch: not all “busy” is meaningful, and “busy” sometimes allots for the five-minute shower we plan to take before bed. We confuse motion with progress, convincing ourselves that as long as we’re doing something, we’re moving forward. In reality, we’re often just running in place.

Busy vs. Productive
There’s a difference between having a full schedule and having a purposeful one. Anxiety tends to blur that line. It convinces us that rest is laziness and that slowing down means falling behind. So instead of prioritizing what actually matters, whether that’s schoolwork, friendships, or even just a simple workout, we chase the comfort of being occupied. Being busy becomes less about passion and more about avoiding the guilt of doing nothing.
Social media doesn’t help. TikTok For You Pages are constantly showing that everyone seems to be doing more, achieving more, balancing more and even sometimes doing more in one hour than we feel like we’ve done all day. The comparison game turns downtime into guilt, making it harder to unplug without feeling like you’re wasting potential or falling behind your peers.

Redefining productivity
Ultimately, this constant urge to be productive creates a cycle where anxiety fuels busyness, and busyness reinforces anxiety. It’s exhausting, but also strangely normalized.
Breaking out of it doesn’t mean dropping everything and disappearing off the grid. It starts smaller: questioning why you feel the need to stay busy in the first place and being honest about what actually fulfills you.
Because maybe the goal isn’t to do more. Maybe it’s to feel less like you have to.
In a culture that glorifies the busy girl aesthetic, choosing to slow down might just be the most productive thing you can do.
How are you choosing to slow down and redefine productivity? Let us know @VALLEYmag on Instagram!