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Grounded in the Present: Sensory Techniques for Anxiety Relief
Published 4 months, 3 weeks ago
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Welcome back. I'm Julia Cartwright, and I'm so glad you're here. It's early December, that time of year when the days get shorter and our to-do lists somehow get longer. If you're feeling that familiar knot of anxiety tightening in your chest today, you're not alone. The holiday season has a way of cranking up our inner noise to eleven, doesn't it? But here's the thing: you showed up today, and that's already an act of wisdom.
Let's settle in together. Find a comfortable seat, somewhere you won't be interrupted for the next few minutes. Your phone's on silent, right? Good. Now just notice what's happening in your body right now. No judgment, just noticing. Where do you feel tension? Where do you feel ease? Simply observe, like you're watching clouds drift across the sky.
I want to introduce you to something I call grounding through your senses. It's my favorite anxiety relief practice because it works with your nervous system rather than against it. When we're anxious, we're often stuck in our heads, rehearsing worst-case scenarios that haven't happened yet. This practice gently brings you back to what's real and happening right now.
Here we go. Take a deep breath in through your nose for a count of four. Hold it for two. Now exhale slowly through your mouth for a count of six. Feel that? You just activated your parasympathetic nervous system, your body's built-in calm switch. Do that two more times at your own pace.
Now let's engage your senses. Look around you and notice five things you can see. Really see them. Maybe it's the way light hits a wall, or the pattern on your sleeve. Take your time. Next, identify four things you can physically feel. The texture of fabric, the temperature of the air, your feet on the ground. Feel how grounded that makes you? Now three things you can hear. Maybe it's traffic outside, maybe it's silence, or the hum of heating. Two things you can smell. If nothing obvious comes to mind, that's perfectly fine; just notice. And finally, one thing you can taste, even if it's just the inside of your mouth.
This practice, this five-four-three-two-one technique, is an anchor. Anxiety lives in our imagined future. Your senses live in the present moment, and the present moment is always safe.
Tonight, when you feel that anxiety creeping back in, run through this practice again. You can do it in the grocery line, before a meeting, or curled up on your couch. Your senses are always there, ready to bring you home.
Thank you so much for listening to Anxiety Relief Daily: Mindfulness Techniques for Inner Calm. Please subscribe so you never miss a moment of calm. You deserve it.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Let's settle in together. Find a comfortable seat, somewhere you won't be interrupted for the next few minutes. Your phone's on silent, right? Good. Now just notice what's happening in your body right now. No judgment, just noticing. Where do you feel tension? Where do you feel ease? Simply observe, like you're watching clouds drift across the sky.
I want to introduce you to something I call grounding through your senses. It's my favorite anxiety relief practice because it works with your nervous system rather than against it. When we're anxious, we're often stuck in our heads, rehearsing worst-case scenarios that haven't happened yet. This practice gently brings you back to what's real and happening right now.
Here we go. Take a deep breath in through your nose for a count of four. Hold it for two. Now exhale slowly through your mouth for a count of six. Feel that? You just activated your parasympathetic nervous system, your body's built-in calm switch. Do that two more times at your own pace.
Now let's engage your senses. Look around you and notice five things you can see. Really see them. Maybe it's the way light hits a wall, or the pattern on your sleeve. Take your time. Next, identify four things you can physically feel. The texture of fabric, the temperature of the air, your feet on the ground. Feel how grounded that makes you? Now three things you can hear. Maybe it's traffic outside, maybe it's silence, or the hum of heating. Two things you can smell. If nothing obvious comes to mind, that's perfectly fine; just notice. And finally, one thing you can taste, even if it's just the inside of your mouth.
This practice, this five-four-three-two-one technique, is an anchor. Anxiety lives in our imagined future. Your senses live in the present moment, and the present moment is always safe.
Tonight, when you feel that anxiety creeping back in, run through this practice again. You can do it in the grocery line, before a meeting, or curled up on your couch. Your senses are always there, ready to bring you home.
Thank you so much for listening to Anxiety Relief Daily: Mindfulness Techniques for Inner Calm. Please subscribe so you never miss a moment of calm. You deserve it.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI