
Is napping a hobby: yes.
Longer answer: it already is—you just haven’t been logging your hours.
Napping is the recreational practice of temporarily exiting consciousness without committing to full sleep.
It differs from “going to bed” in both intention and outcome.
A nap exists in a softer category of time—somewhere between rest and disappearance.
It is often performed without announcement, planning, or formal conclusion.
By traditional standards, a hobby is:
Napping meets all criteria.
In fact, it exceeds them.
Unlike many hobbies, napping requires:
You do not “get better” at napping.
You simply… continue.
If you have ever said, “I’m just going to rest my eyes,”
you are already an active participant.
Less commonly, it appears:
Secondary environments:
The defining feature is not location—
it’s the quiet agreement between body and surface.
The stated reason is rest.
The actual reasons vary:
There is also the unique appeal of the nap’s ambiguity.
A nap does not demand success.
It only asks that you close your eyes and see what happens.
“It’s just laziness.”
Incorrect. Laziness implies resistance.
Napping implies surrender.
“It ruins your sleep schedule.”
Only if you believe in schedules.
“You should power through instead.”
Many have tried. Results are mixed.
Napping has existed for centuries under different names:
It has been practiced by:
It is one of the few activities that asks nothing from you…
and still gives something back.
Yes.
Napping is a hobby.
Not because it was designed to be one—
but because it behaves like one.
It occupies time.
It provides relief.
It repeats.
And most importantly…
…it requires no explanation beyond the act itself.
If you’ve been doing it without calling it anything…
You can stop wondering.
This is a hobby.