You know something is good when people keep recommending it to you. One day, you’ve never heard of The Bear, the next, your social feeds are full of think pieces on masculinity and TikToks about the female gaze. Before you know it, you’ve binged the whole season.
I can vouch for this exercise. I use it when I’m feeling anxious or, on the opposite end of the spectrum, when I’m having an experience I’d really like to savor. Whatever the impetus, you won’t regret giving yourself a minute or two to be present in your environment and notice the world around you. And I personally promise this meditation will make you feel better than if you'd used the time to doomscroll.
You can try it *right now.* Here’s how it works (Directions vary on which order to go in, but here’s what I usually do):
5️⃣ 👀 Notice five things you can see. 4️⃣ 👂🏿 Four things that you can hear. 3️⃣ 🤲🏼 Three things that you can feel. 2️⃣ 👃🏾 Two things you can smell. 1️⃣ 😋 One thing you can taste.
Big inhale. Big exhale. Now that you've checked in with the present moment, know that this is a tool you can take with you wherever you go. If you like how it felt ...
Here are four of our favorite episodes on mindfulness:
🌬 A guided practice for breath-based meditation from Jon Kabat-Zinn, the founder of mindfulness-based stress reduction: Read or Listen
🌧 Psychologist and mindfulness teacher Tara Brach explains a simple mindfulness tool using the acronym RAIN: Read or Listen
😡 A six-step practice to help you harness your anger from Rod Owens, a lama in the Kagyu lineage of Tibetan Buddhism: Read or Listen
☮️ A conversation with author and meditation teacher Sharon Salzberg on how meditation can be used for social change: Read or Listen
Remember, taking time to pause doesn’t just help you, it allows you to be your best self for others:
"One of the strangest things I discovered about meditation practice is that while it looks like maybe the most solitary activity imaginable ... what it actually produces is a profound sense of connection, not only to yourself but to others," — Sharon Salzberg
Thanks for taking a moment to connect. I hope you’ll make space for many more.
— Beck Harlan, Life Kit visual editor
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