Mindful Waking
Before reaching for your phone, you might take three deep breaths and notice how your body feels. This creates a moment of awareness before engaging with external demands.
Practical approaches you can integrate into your everyday routine
How you begin your day may influence your sense of ease throughout it. These practices take just a few minutes.
Before reaching for your phone, you might take three deep breaths and notice how your body feels. This creates a moment of awareness before engaging with external demands.
Consider one quality you'd like to bring to your day—such as patience, curiosity, or ease. This is about setting a gentle direction, not achieving perfection.
A few minutes of stretching or light movement may help transition from rest to activity. Focus on what feels comfortable for your body.
Taking time to eat breakfast without multitasking is one way to begin the day with presence rather than rushing.
The middle of the day often brings peak demands. These techniques offer ways to pause and recalibrate.
Find a quiet space and focus on your breath. Count to four on the inhale, hold for two, exhale for six. Repeat for five minutes.
If possible, step outside for a few minutes. Notice the sky, trees, or any natural elements around you.
Sitting comfortably, bring attention to different parts of your body, noticing any tension without trying to change it.
Use drinking water as a mindful moment. Notice the temperature, taste, and sensation of the water.
Gentle neck rolls, shoulder shrugs, and wrist circles may release physical tension accumulated from sitting.
Briefly acknowledge one or two things going reasonably well, even if small. This may shift perspective during challenging moments.
Creating a transition between day and rest may support better sleep and recovery.
Setting a time to reduce screen exposure—ideally an hour before sleep—may allow your nervous system to begin settling.
Briefly note what happened during the day without judgment. This may help process experiences and create closure.
Lying down, tense and release each muscle group from toes to head. This signals to your body that it's time to rest.
Consistent evening activities—like reading, gentle stretching, or listening to quiet music—create predictable cues for rest.
When you need immediate support during particularly overwhelming moments.
Inhale for 4 counts, hold for 7, exhale for 8. This pattern may activate your body's relaxation response.
Splashing cold water on your face or holding a cold object may provide a physiological reset.
Name 5 things you see, 4 you can touch, 3 you hear, 2 you smell, 1 you taste. This brings attention to the present.
The most effective practice is one you'll use. Start with one or two techniques that feel manageable and build from there. Consistency matters more than perfection.
Choose one technique to try for a week before adding others. This allows you to notice what works for you.
Different situations may call for different approaches. Having several options gives you choices.