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The Pause That Dissolves: A 5-Minute Mindful Antidote to Stress
Published 3 weeks, 4 days ago
Description
Hello, and welcome back to Daily Mindfulness. I'm Julia Cartwright, and I'm so glad you're here with me today. Sunday morning, early February, that perfect moment when the weekend is still unfolding but your mind might already be spinning toward the week ahead. Am I right? That low hum of anticipation mixed with maybe a little dread about everything waiting in your inbox. So today, we're going to do something really specific. We're going to practice what I call "the pause that dissolves," and it's designed to interrupt that stress spiral before it picks up speed.
Find yourself somewhere comfortable right now. Doesn't have to be fancy. Your couch, your bed, even your car works. Settle your body like you're settling into something soft. Let your shoulders drop away from your ears. Now, bring your attention to your breath, but don't change it. Just notice it. Breathing in, breathing out. Like watching clouds move across the sky. You're not directing them; you're just watching. Stay here for just a moment.
Now, here's our main practice. I want you to imagine your stress as something physical. Maybe it's a knot in your chest, maybe it's like static electricity, maybe it's a heavy coat you've been wearing. Whatever it is, just notice what it feels like without judgment. Don't try to fix it yet. Just acknowledge it. Say silently, "Yes, I feel you there."
Now, as you inhale through your nose, imagine breathing in fresh, cool air that's carrying light, like morning sunshine through a window. Let that light touch the edges of your stress. Not fighting it, not pushing it away, just touching it with gentleness. Exhale slowly through your mouth, and as you do, imagine releasing the weight. Not all at once. Just a little bit, like opening a window and letting some stuffiness out.
Do this five more times. Inhale light and calm. Exhale weight and tension. Breathing in, breathing out. In and out. Notice how your body shifts, even slightly. That's the practice working.
Here's what I want you to do today when stress creeps back in, and it will, because that's what stress does. Use this same technique. Even just one cycle of this breath can interrupt that momentum. Carry that feeling of light and release with you through your Sunday, through your Monday, through whatever comes next.
Thank you so much for joining me on Daily Mindfulness: 5-Minute Meditations for Stress Relief. If this helped you today, please subscribe so you never miss a practice. You deserve to feel calm. I'll see you tomorrow.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Find yourself somewhere comfortable right now. Doesn't have to be fancy. Your couch, your bed, even your car works. Settle your body like you're settling into something soft. Let your shoulders drop away from your ears. Now, bring your attention to your breath, but don't change it. Just notice it. Breathing in, breathing out. Like watching clouds move across the sky. You're not directing them; you're just watching. Stay here for just a moment.
Now, here's our main practice. I want you to imagine your stress as something physical. Maybe it's a knot in your chest, maybe it's like static electricity, maybe it's a heavy coat you've been wearing. Whatever it is, just notice what it feels like without judgment. Don't try to fix it yet. Just acknowledge it. Say silently, "Yes, I feel you there."
Now, as you inhale through your nose, imagine breathing in fresh, cool air that's carrying light, like morning sunshine through a window. Let that light touch the edges of your stress. Not fighting it, not pushing it away, just touching it with gentleness. Exhale slowly through your mouth, and as you do, imagine releasing the weight. Not all at once. Just a little bit, like opening a window and letting some stuffiness out.
Do this five more times. Inhale light and calm. Exhale weight and tension. Breathing in, breathing out. In and out. Notice how your body shifts, even slightly. That's the practice working.
Here's what I want you to do today when stress creeps back in, and it will, because that's what stress does. Use this same technique. Even just one cycle of this breath can interrupt that momentum. Carry that feeling of light and release with you through your Sunday, through your Monday, through whatever comes next.
Thank you so much for joining me on Daily Mindfulness: 5-Minute Meditations for Stress Relief. If this helped you today, please subscribe so you never miss a practice. You deserve to feel calm. I'll see you tomorrow.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI