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The Pause Portal: Find Calm Before the Week Takes Over
Published 17 hours ago
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Hey there, welcome back. I'm Julia Cartwright, and I'm so glad you're here with me today. Whether you're sitting in your car before heading into the school pickup line, or you've stolen five minutes while the kids are occupied, I see you. And I want you to know—whatever's been happening in your household today, you're doing better than you think you are.
I'm guessing that by mid-morning on a Sunday, you might be feeling that familiar knot of tension. You know the one? It's that low hum of worry about the week ahead, maybe some frustration from a morning that didn't go quite as smoothly as you'd hoped, or that creeping sense that you're not quite keeping up with everything on your plate. So today, we're going to practice something I call the Pause Portal—a way to reset your nervous system so you can show up for your kids not from a place of depletion, but from genuine calm.
Let's settle in together. Find a comfortable seat wherever you are right now. Your feet can be flat on the ground, or cross-legged, whatever feels supportive. Just notice the places where your body meets whatever's holding you up. That's your anchor.
Now, take a deep breath in through your nose for a count of four. Feel it travel down like cool water finding its way through a riverbed. And exhale slowly for a count of six. That longer exhale? That's the magic. It tells your nervous system that you're safe. Again, in for four, out for six. Beautiful.
Here's what I want you to do throughout this week: when you notice your child is activated—maybe they're whining, or defiant, or just dysregulated—pause before you respond. And I mean genuinely pause. Take two of those longer exhales. Because here's the thing: kids are like emotional barometers. They absorb our stress, our rushing, our unresolved frustration. But they also absorb our calm. When you pause, you're not just regulating yourself. You're modeling for them that there's space between what happens and how we respond. That space is where wisdom lives.
Your practical takeaway this week is simple. Place a small object somewhere you'll see it regularly—maybe a smooth stone on your nightstand, or a special mug in the kitchen. Each time you notice it, take two intentional breaths and ask yourself: am I leading with calm or with chaos right now? No judgment. Just awareness.
Thank you so much for joining me today on Mindful Parenting: Daily Tips for Raising Calm Kids. If this resonated with you, please subscribe so you don't miss our next practice. You're doing this beautifully. Really.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
I'm guessing that by mid-morning on a Sunday, you might be feeling that familiar knot of tension. You know the one? It's that low hum of worry about the week ahead, maybe some frustration from a morning that didn't go quite as smoothly as you'd hoped, or that creeping sense that you're not quite keeping up with everything on your plate. So today, we're going to practice something I call the Pause Portal—a way to reset your nervous system so you can show up for your kids not from a place of depletion, but from genuine calm.
Let's settle in together. Find a comfortable seat wherever you are right now. Your feet can be flat on the ground, or cross-legged, whatever feels supportive. Just notice the places where your body meets whatever's holding you up. That's your anchor.
Now, take a deep breath in through your nose for a count of four. Feel it travel down like cool water finding its way through a riverbed. And exhale slowly for a count of six. That longer exhale? That's the magic. It tells your nervous system that you're safe. Again, in for four, out for six. Beautiful.
Here's what I want you to do throughout this week: when you notice your child is activated—maybe they're whining, or defiant, or just dysregulated—pause before you respond. And I mean genuinely pause. Take two of those longer exhales. Because here's the thing: kids are like emotional barometers. They absorb our stress, our rushing, our unresolved frustration. But they also absorb our calm. When you pause, you're not just regulating yourself. You're modeling for them that there's space between what happens and how we respond. That space is where wisdom lives.
Your practical takeaway this week is simple. Place a small object somewhere you'll see it regularly—maybe a smooth stone on your nightstand, or a special mug in the kitchen. Each time you notice it, take two intentional breaths and ask yourself: am I leading with calm or with chaos right now? No judgment. Just awareness.
Thank you so much for joining me today on Mindful Parenting: Daily Tips for Raising Calm Kids. If this resonated with you, please subscribe so you don't miss our next practice. You're doing this beautifully. Really.
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/47ZqpWT
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI