Productivity

‘French Sunday’ is the latest viral happiness trend. Here’s how to do it the right way—and boost your productivity all week

If you’re looking for more work-life balance, take a lesson from Paris.



 The Art of the French Sunday: Why Doing Nothing Is the Ultimate Productivity Hack

If you believe Paris is always a good idea—and that the French have mastered the art of living well—consider this your invitation to slow down.

While many Americans treat weekends like a race to conquer errands, laundry, meal prep, and inbox zero, Sundays in France are protected. Sacred, even. A time to exhale, reconnect, and embrace the radical act of… nothing.

> "Even protests in France happen every day except Sunday… that's how sacred [they] are," says Céline Kaplan, cofounder of upcycled marketplace OOOF and a PR agent for French brands in New York.

What if, instead of dreading Monday, you treated Sunday as a true pause—a soft landing that sets a calmer tone for the week ahead? Say goodbye to the "Sunday Scaries" and hello to *Dimanche*, the French way.

 So, What Exactly Is a "French Sunday"?

Full disclosure: I've been practicing my own version for years. Sleep in? Oui. Coffee and leisurely reading? Absolutely. A long, unhurried brunch? *Bien sûr.*

Though the concept is deeply rooted in French culture, "French Sunday" recently gained global attention thanks to Vogue. At its core, it's a gentle rebellion against burnout—a reminder that rest isn't laziness; it's sustainability.

In France, most shops close by noon on Sundays. This isn't an inconvenience—it's a cultural boundary. Without the pressure to "be productive," the day becomes about presence: sharing a meal, wandering without a destination, or simply sitting with a good book. No scrolling. No optimizing. Just being.

As Vogue puts it, French Sundays are "lazy, stress-free days, when the main activity is to do nothing." Contrast that with the modern productivity playbook, which turns Sunday into a prep day for the workweek—meal prepping, calendar-reviewing, outfit-planning—and you start to see why so many of us feel exhausted before Monday even begins.

 How to Cultivate Your Own French Sunday

It starts with a shift in mindset. A French Sunday isn't a checklist; it's an intention.

**1. Let your body wake you.**  
Ditch the alarm. Rise when you're ready—not when your to-do list demands it.

**2. Prioritize real connection.**  
Call a friend. Host a casual lunch. Visit family. In France, the Sunday *déjeuner* is legendary: a multi-course, hours-long gathering centered on good food and even better conversation. (Science agrees: meaningful social time boosts mental health.)

**3. Move without purpose.**  
Be a *flâneur* or *flâneuse*—stroll with no destination. Notice the light, the architecture, the way the air smells after rain.

**4. Indulge in simple pleasures.**  
- Take a gloriously long nap.  
- Snack on cheese and bread, just because.  
- Cook something that simmers all afternoon.  
- Find a beautiful view and just… look.  
- See two films back-to-back at a local cinema.  
- And, perhaps the most French suggestion of all: make love. (You won't find *that* on a corporate wellness slide.)

**5. Unplug to reconnect.**  
Put the phone away. Digital detoxing isn't about deprivation—it's about creating space for presence, creativity, and calm.

 The Real Takeaway

A French Sunday isn't about copying a culture—it's about reclaiming time. It's permission to stop performing productivity and start practicing peace. You don't need a Parisian apartment or a baguette under your arm (though neither hurts). You just need the courage to treat one day a week as truly yours.

So this Sunday, try it: Do less. Feel more. Let the week begin not with anxiety, but with ease.

*Bon dimanche.* 🥐☕