It’s 4 p.m. You spent the day at a desk. You didn’t lift anything heavier than a coffee mug. You didn’t walk more than a few hundred steps between your chair, the kitchen, and the bathroom. And yet your body feels like it just finished a shift at a job site — heavy limbs, foggy head, an ache behind the eyes that has no obvious cause.
You tell yourself this doesn’t make sense. You did nothing. So why does it feel like you did everything?
The honest answer is that “doing nothing” was a lie your body told your mind. You weren’t idle. You were spending a different kind of currency — one your culture has almost no vocabulary for, and one science only recently found a way to measure directly.
The Brain Has a Bank Account, and It Isn’t Made of Sugar
For decades, the leading explanation for this feeling was simple and satisfying: the brain runs on glucose, thinking burns glucose, and enough thinking leaves you running on empty — the same way a muscle runs out of fuel mid-sprint. This was the foundation of what psychologists called ego depletion, first proposed in 1998 by Roy Baumeister and colleagues after an experiment where people who resisted eating tempting cookies later gave up faster on a difficult puzzle than people who hadn’t been asked to resist anything.
