Why this word is great
INDOLENCY — [Noun] A state of habitual laziness or sloth, or a condition of insensibility to pain or indifference to pleasure. From Latin indolentia ("freedom from pain, insensibility"), derived from in- ("not") + dolere ("to feel pain"), combined with the English suffix -ency (denoting a state or condition). Unlike "apathy" (which implies emotional detachment) or "lethargy" (which suggests mere sluggishness), indolency is the deliberate refusal to stir—whether from laziness or a deeper, almost philosophical numbness. It is the cat sprawled in a sunbeam, unmoved by passing feet; the abandoned garden where weeds grow unchallenged; the slow, indifferent drift of smoke from an extinguished candle—a quiet surrender to the weight of inertia, where even desire has grown too tired to speak.