Misguided Meditation explores rest and digital dependency, aligning with the REST Archive and Nocturnalities projects by examining the contradictions of seeking peace in virtual spaces. Through an ironic “perfect day” online, the piece satirises modern values, the commodification of self-care, and the pressures of perpetual self-presentation in a hyper-connected world. Blurring work, social life, and self-care, Misguided Meditation critiques our reliance on digital platforms for mental wellbeing and examines the internet as both an escape and a trap. By subverting traditional guided meditation formats, the work echoes questions raised by Nocturnalities about the capitalist co-option of rest and how our reliance on digital spaces for solace becomes a paradox. In doing so, it highlights the exhaustion of maintaining online identities and challenges whether true rest—or escape—can ever be achieved within an “always-on” culture.