60 short practices for a mind that settles.
Secular and evidence-based. Each entry cites the study or framework it's grounded in — Brown & Gerbarg vagal-breath research, MBSR, MBCT, the Stoic letters. No spiritual prerequisites. Most run five to twenty minutes. Almost all have a chair-friendly version. Pick one, try it for a week, see what changes.
For you
Take the 30-second quiz →A few quick questions. We'll surface practices that fit your state and time.Time
Context
Cluster
Benefit
Duration
Difficulty
Posture
60 practices
Foundations
beginner
4-7-8 Breath
4-7-8 breath is a paced breathing technique — inhale for 4 counts, hold for 7, exhale for 8 — that shifts autonomic balance toward the parasympathetic branch, slowing heart rate and reducing the physiological signature of anxiety. Andrew Weil adapted the ratio from pranayama tradition for clinical use; the mechanism is the extended exhale, which activates the vagal brake on the heart. It is useful for acute stress, pre-sleep wind-down, or any moment when the nervous system needs a manual override.
5 min·Sitting·scriptedStressAnxiety+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Basic Sitting Meditation
A sustained attention practice drawn from the core curriculum of MBSR (Kabat-Zinn, 1990): sit still, rest attention on the breath, and return when the mind wanders. It is the foundational sit for adults managing chronic stress or anxiety, and it is the base practice adapted in MBCT for people with a history of recurrent depression. Use it as a daily anchor — morning works well, but any consistent time holds.
10 min·Sitting·silentFocusStress+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Body Scan
The body scan moves attention systematically through regions of the body — feet to head — pausing to notice sensation without trying to change it. It is the foundation practice of MBSR (Kabat-Zinn, 1990) and has the strongest clinical evidence base of any mindfulness technique for chronic pain and stress reduction. Use it as a daily anchor practice, before sleep, or when physical tension is high and you want to meet it directly rather than fight it.
20 min·Lying·scriptedStressChronic pain+3OpenFoundations
beginner
Box Breath
Box breath is a four-part breath pattern — inhale, hold, exhale, hold, each for four counts — that slows the breathing rate and engages the parasympathetic nervous system. It is used clinically for acute anxiety and performance stress, and requires no equipment or privacy. Reach for it before a difficult conversation, in a waiting room, or any time you need a quick reset without lying down.
5 min·Any·scriptedStressAnxiety+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Hand on Heart
You place one or both hands on your chest, feel the warmth and weight, and breathe slowly. The physical contact activates the parasympathetic nervous system and appears to prompt oxytocin release — effects documented in Kristin Neff's self-compassion research even without any verbal component. It is useful in the middle of a hard moment when you cannot step away, and it works for anxiety, loneliness, and acute grief.
5 min·Any·scriptedEmotional regulationAnxiety+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Mantra Repetition (Samatha Concentration)
A short-form single-pointed concentration practice — samatha in the classical Buddhist taxonomy, focused-attention training in the cognitive-neuroscience literature (Lutz & Slagter, Trends in Cognitive Sciences 12(4):163-169, 2008). Choose a neutral mantra such as 'so-hum' on the breath, or a simple numeric count from 1 to 10, and rest attention there. When the mind wanders, return — that return is the rep. This is distinct from open-monitoring mindfulness (e.g., basic sitting): you are not noting whatever arises; you are training a single anchor. Used in Transcendental Meditation, in mantra-based contemplative prayer across traditions, and in secular concentration training. Brain-imaging work shows distinct attentional-network activation patterns between focused-attention and open-monitoring families, so a member whose goal is focus needs at least one practice from this family — open-monitoring alone will not deliver the same training stimulus.
5 min·Sitting·silentFocusConcentration+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Mindful Eating
The raisin exercise from week one of MBSR (Kabat-Zinn, 1990): you eat one small piece of food with full, deliberate attention to its appearance, smell, texture, and taste. The food is incidental — the practice demonstrates that ordinary attention, applied carefully, transforms ordinary experience. Useful for anyone who finds breath-focused meditation frustrating or who wants a concrete entry point into present-moment awareness.
10 min·Sitting·scriptedFocusStress+1OpenFoundations
beginner
Mindful Sip
A scaled-down version of MBSR mindful eating: one cup of tea or coffee taken with deliberate, unhurried attention. It fits inside a morning routine that already includes a hot drink, so it costs no extra time. Useful for anyone building a basic attention practice or looking for a low-barrier entry point on difficult days.
5 min·Sitting·scriptedStressFocusOpenFoundations
beginner
Noting
Noting is a concentration practice in which you silently label whatever pulls your attention — a thought, a sound, a sensation, an emotion — with a single soft word, then return to the breath. The label creates just enough distance between you and the mental event that you stop being swept along by it. It is particularly useful for people who get caught in repetitive thinking or who find plain breath-watching too abstract to sustain. Use it any time rumination is running hot or focus keeps fragmenting.
10 min·Sitting·silentFocusRumination+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Pomodoro-Cued Focus Block
An applied single-pointed concentration practice in 25-minute work blocks — the Pomodoro Technique (Cirillo, 1987). Pick one task, set a timer for 25 minutes, work without context-switching, then take a 5-minute break. After 4 Pomodoros, take a longer 15-30 minute rest. Where mantra repetition or seated samatha train concentration in a stripped-down anchor, the Pomodoro trains the same focused-attention capacity in a real-world task context: writing, coding, studying, planning, deep reading. The structured cadence — fixed work window, fixed break, audible boundary — externalizes the executive function that ADHD-adjacent attention difficulties make hard to sustain internally. Particularly useful for students, knowledge workers, remote workers without natural office boundaries, and members rebuilding focus capacity after a high-distraction stretch. Frame this as productivity-tested rather than RCT-proven; it is a procedural intervention with broad practitioner uptake and convergent attention-training research, not a clinical-trial protocol.
25 min·Any·applied-taskFocusConcentration+3OpenFoundations
beginner
RAIN
RAIN is a four-step structured inquiry — Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Nurture — for working with difficult emotions that simple breath attention won't touch. It was developed by insight-meditation teacher Michele McDonald and popularized clinically by Tara Brach in Radical Acceptance (2003). It suits people caught in a loop of grief, anxiety, or self-criticism who need a concrete method rather than open-ended sitting. Works best when you can name the feeling specifically — 'anger at my daughter' rather than 'upset.'
10 min·Sitting·scriptedEmotional regulationRumination+2OpenFoundations
beginner
STOP
STOP is a four-step micro-pause — Stop, Take a breath, Observe, Proceed — taught in the MBSR clinical curriculum (Stahl & Goldstein, MBSR Workbook, 2010). The full sequence takes under a minute and can be inserted anywhere: before answering a difficult call, after a frustrating interaction, or whenever you notice your jaw is tight. Its value is the gap it creates between trigger and reaction. Most regretted choices live in that gap.
5 min·Any·scriptedStressEmotional regulation+1OpenFoundations
beginner
Three-Breath Reset
Three consecutive breaths taken with full, deliberate attention — one to feel the air arrive, one to feel the body release on the exhale, one to register what is actually in front of you. It works as a between-tasks reset anywhere you have ten seconds: a doorway, a red light, the moment before you pick up the phone. The practice is designed for frequency rather than depth; ten resets distributed across a day tend to produce more cumulative calm than a single longer session.
5 min·Any·silentStressFocus+1OpenFoundations
intermediate
Values-Based Action Planning
Values-Based Action Planning is the core committed-action move from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (Hayes, Pistorello & Levin, Counseling Psychologist 2012;40(7):976-1002). ACT treats depression and meaninglessness not as feelings to fix but as signals that current behavior has drifted from what matters. The APA Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Depression (2019) includes ACT among recommended evidence-based modalities. The practice asks: what do I actually stand for, where is my behavior out of alignment, and what is one specific action I can take this week in service of that value — regardless of whether I feel motivated to do it.
20 min·Sitting·journalingDepression recurrenceLow meaning+2OpenFoundations
beginner
Walking Meditation
Walking meditation uses a short, slow back-and-forth path to anchor attention in the physical sensations of movement — lift, swing, and placement of each foot. It was built into MBSR (Kabat-Zinn, 1990) specifically for people who find seated or lying stillness difficult, including those with back pain, restless minds, or bodies that need motion to settle. Use it as a standalone practice, a transition between sitting periods, or on any day when sitting feels impossible.
15 min·Walking·movement-basedStressFocus+2OpenLife Seasons
intermediate
Aging Anxiety: Values vs Fears
A two-column writing exercise drawn from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: you name specific fears about aging on the left, then identify the values those fears point toward on the right. The fears are not argued away — they are treated as signals about what you care about. Useful when aging-related worry feels circular or paralyzing, and when you want to redirect that energy toward something you can actually do this week.
15 min·Sitting·journalingAnxietyValues clarification+1OpenLife Seasons
beginner
Caregiver Guilt Unpack
A cognitive defusion exercise from Acceptance and Commitment Therapy that uses structured rewriting to create distance between you and a recurring guilt thought. It is designed for caregivers who find themselves looping on thoughts like 'I'm not doing enough.' Use it when the thought has been circling for more than a day or is interfering with sleep or basic self-care.
10 min·Sitting·journalingCaregiver burnoutRumination+1OpenLife Seasons
beginner
Caregiver Self-Compassion Break
A three-step pause drawn from Kristin Neff's self-compassion research: acknowledge that the moment is hard, recognize you are not alone in it, and offer yourself a brief physical gesture of kindness. Designed for the acute moments of caregiving — a medication refusal, a fall, a sundowning episode — not as a daily ritual. No journaling, no quiet room required; five minutes in a hallway or bathroom works.
5 min·Sitting·scriptedCaregiver burnoutStress+1OpenLife Seasons
beginner
Carstensen's Narrowing Inversion
A structured writing practice built on Laura Carstensen's socioemotional selectivity theory, which finds that adults who deliberately narrow their social circle — rather than drift into isolation — report higher well-being than younger adults. The practice reframes a shrinking circle as an act of selection, not loss, and ends with one concrete action per relationship. Use it when social life feels like it is contracting and you want to direct that contraction rather than be carried by it.
15 min·Sitting·journalingLonelinessPurpose+1OpenLife Seasons
intermediate
Chronic Pain Breath Observation
This practice draws directly from Kabat-Zinn's original MBSR chronic-pain protocol at UMass Medical Center: you use the breath as a stable anchor while turning careful, descriptive attention toward pain sensations. The clinical target is pain catastrophizing — the layered story of dread and helplessness that amplifies raw sensation — not the sensation itself. Research shows reduced catastrophizing and improved daily functioning, not pain elimination. Use it during a flare, as a daily maintenance practice, or whenever pain is pulling your attention into a spiral.
20 min·Lying·scriptedChronic painStress+1OpenLife Seasons
beginner
Empty Nest / Role Transition Reframe
A narrative-therapy writing practice in which you step outside your own story and narrate the next chapter of your life in the third person, as a biographer would. It is designed for people navigating a role that has ended — the last child leaving home, retirement, the death of a caregiving relationship — and who feel unmoored by the loss of an identity that organized their days. Use it when the house feels too quiet and the old title no longer fits, but the next one hasn't arrived yet.
20 min·Sitting·journalingPurposeValues clarification+1OpenLife Seasons
intermediate
Grief Tasks Practice
A structured writing practice built on J. William Worden's four tasks of mourning (1991, rev. 2008), which replaced the Kübler-Ross stages model in clinical grief work. You write one focused paragraph against each task, returning weekly to track your own movement through the loss. It is designed for people who are past the acute shock of bereavement and want a concrete, repeatable way to work with grief rather than simply endure it.
20 min·Sitting·journalingGriefEmotional regulationOpenLife Seasons
intermediate
Health Anxiety Body Check Pause
A structured CBT exercise for health anxiety, drawn from Salkovskis and Warwick's cognitive model, that trains you to separate raw physical sensation from the catastrophic story your mind attaches to it. You notice a body signal, describe it in neutral sensory language, write down the worst-case interpretation, then generate one plausible alternative. Most useful in the minutes after a worrying sensation surfaces, and in a decade when ambiguous body signals genuinely increase in frequency. This is not a substitute for evaluating new or persistent symptoms with a physician.
10 min·Sitting·scriptedAnxietyRumination+1OpenLife Seasons
beginner
Intergenerational Connection Prompt
A structured preparation practice in which you choose two open-ended questions — one for a younger person in your life, one for an older relative or peer — designed to invite story rather than status update. It draws on generativity research and interview-design principles to replace small talk with genuine curiosity. Useful when you feel disconnected from family, when a visit or call is coming up, or when you want a low-effort way to strengthen a relationship that has gone quiet.
10 min·Any·scriptedLonelinessPurpose+1OpenLife Seasons
beginner
Loneliness: Weak Ties Activation
This practice uses Granovetter's sociological finding that brief, low-stakes contact with acquaintances — not close friends — reliably lifts daily mood and reduces felt isolation. One initiated exchange per day with a weak tie (a neighbor, pharmacist, librarian, former colleague) is the entire task. It is designed for adults experiencing loneliness, social contraction after retirement or loss, or anyone whose close-tie network has thinned with age.
10 min·Any·scriptedLonelinessPurposeOpenLife Seasons
intermediate
Post-Loss Memory Anchor
A structured writing practice drawn from Klass, Silverman & Nickman's continuing-bonds research, which found that maintaining an internal relationship with a deceased person supports long-term grief integration better than the older 'detachment' model. You write one specific memory in present-tense sensory detail, then write an imagined conversation — what the person would advise, argue, or tease you about today. Best used after the acute phase of loss has passed, when you want a reliable way to feel connected without being destabilized.
15 min·Sitting·journalingGriefEmotional regulationOpenLife Seasons
intermediate
Retirement Transition Reflection
A structured writing audit that separates what work gave you in terms of schedule from what it gave you in terms of meaning, then identifies which meaning elements you can carry forward. Designed for the first two years after leaving full-time work, when depression risk is measurably elevated — particularly for people whose identity was tightly bound to their professional role. Use it once at the start of the transition and revisit it at 30-day intervals as you test new anchors.
20 min·Sitting·journalingPurposeValues clarification+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Before-Meal Pause
Three slow breaths taken before the first bite of any meal, drawn from Jean Kristeller's MB-EAT program (Indiana State University). The research target is interoceptive accuracy — your ability to notice hunger, fullness, and satisfaction — not weight management. It is especially useful for adults who eat alone and have drifted into eating on autopilot in front of a screen.
1 min·Sitting·scriptedStressFocusOpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Dishwashing Meditation
A sensory-anchor practice that uses the daily task of washing dishes as a structured attention exercise. Full engagement with physical sensation — water temperature, soap texture, the weight and sound of each dish — interrupts rumination and trains present-moment focus. It works by attaching a new mental habit to a task you already do, a behavior-design principle Fogg (2019) calls habit stacking. Useful on high-stress days, after difficult conversations, or any time you need a low-barrier reset that requires no extra time.
8 min·Standing·scriptedStressFocus+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Doorway Pause
A single complete breath taken each time you cross a doorway threshold, anchored to a transition you already make dozens of times a day. Radvansky's doorway-effect research (2011) shows that passing through a doorway triggers a cognitive event boundary — this practice uses that natural reset rather than fighting it. It suits anyone who wants to interrupt stress accumulation without carving out separate practice time.
1 min·Walking·scriptedStressFocus+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
First-Coffee Mindful Sip
A structured, three-sip attention exercise built directly on the MBSR raisin-eating protocol, applied to the morning hot drink you were already going to have. It trains sensory attention and interrupts autopilot at the start of the day without requiring extra time or equipment. Best suited to anyone who already has a consistent morning coffee or tea habit and wants a low-friction entry point into daily practice.
3 min·Sitting·scriptedFocusStressOpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Gardening Attention
A single, bounded gardening task — weeding one bed, pruning one shrub, watering one row — done with full sensory attention and no phone. The practice works by narrowing focus to what is immediately in front of you, which interrupts rumination without requiring you to sit still or follow a formal protocol. Horticulture therapy research shows measurable cortisol reduction and lower depressive symptoms in adults. Use it on any day you are already going outside.
12 min·Standing·scriptedStressRumination+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Hand-Washing 20-Second Anchor
This practice converts the CDC-recommended 20-second handwash into four slow, deliberate breaths — roughly five seconds each — using the running water as a sensory anchor. It suits anyone who wants a quick parasympathetic reset without adding time to their day, and is especially useful after medical appointments or stressful interactions. No equipment, no extra time, no learning curve.
1 min·Standing·scriptedStressFocusOpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Phone-Pickup Reset
A single deliberate breath taken after picking up the phone but before unlocking it, inserting a choice point into a habit loop that most adults run roughly ninety-six times a day. It targets the automatic cue-behavior sequence — phone in hand, thumb moving — by making the action conscious for two to four seconds. Useful for anyone who notices they are mid-scroll before they decided to scroll, or who picks up the phone to escape a feeling rather than to accomplish something.
1 min·Any·scriptedFocusRumination+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Step-Counting Breath
You coordinate your breathing with your footsteps — four steps to inhale, six steps to exhale — which lands your breath rate near the 5.5 breaths-per-minute range associated with improved heart-rate variability and vagal tone. It works well for anyone who finds seated breathwork restless or uncomfortable, and it pairs naturally with a prescribed daily walk for blood-pressure or cardiac-rehab management.
10 min·Walking·scriptedStressAnxiety+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Traffic-Light Breath
A single slow breath — in through the nose, out through the mouth — taken every time you stop at a red light. It converts an involuntary, often frustrating pause into a brief parasympathetic reset without adding anything to your schedule. Useful for anyone who drives regularly and wants a low-effort way to practice breath-pacing outside formal sessions. Eyes stay open; this is not a meditation sit.
1 min·Sitting·scriptedStressAnxiety+1OpenMicro-Practices
beginner
Walking From the Car
A one-to-three minute MBSR-style attention practice done during the walk between your parked car and wherever you're headed — a store, a clinic, your own front door. It converts a transition most people spend on autopilot into a brief, deliberate reset. Useful for anyone who wants a low-barrier daily anchor that requires no extra time, clothing, or equipment.
2 min·Walking·scriptedStressFocus+1OpenStoic Journaling
beginner
Dichotomy of Control
A structured written exercise drawn from Epictetus's Enchiridion (c. 125 CE), chapter one: sort the components of a current worry into what is and is not within your control. It is useful for chronic anxiety, repetitive worry loops, and situations where you feel overwhelmed by circumstances you cannot change. Use it when a specific concern is taking up mental real estate and you want to redirect your energy toward what you can actually do.
15 min·Sitting·journalingAnxietyRumination+1OpenStoic Journaling
beginner
Evening Stoic Review
A structured written review drawn from Marcus Aurelius's documented nightly habit, organized around three questions: what went well, what fell short, and what one concrete adjustment you will make tomorrow. It helps interrupt rumination by converting vague regret into a specific, actionable intention. Use it in the last 30 minutes before bed, after the day's obligations are finished.
10 min·Sitting·journalingValues clarificationRumination+1OpenStoic Journaling
intermediate
Letter to Your Future Self
You write a detailed letter addressed to yourself one year from now, describing the person you intend to become — your habits, relationships, and what you have let go. Drawn from Seneca's epistolary practice of deliberate self-examination, it works best when you are at a transition point or feeling directionless. The letter is sealed and reread at six months, turning a one-time writing exercise into a sustained accountability practice.
30 min·Sitting·journalingValues clarificationPurpose+1OpenStoic Journaling
beginner
Morning Stoic Reflection
A written morning preparation drawn from Marcus Aurelius's Meditations, Book Two — three prompts that map the day ahead, sort what is and isn't within your control, and name the character you intend to bring to it. Useful for anyone who wants a clear head before the day's demands arrive, particularly on days with difficult appointments, caregiving responsibilities, or decisions that matter. Ten minutes with pen and paper; no prior philosophy background required.
10 min·Sitting·journalingFocusValues clarification+1OpenStoic Journaling
intermediate
Premeditatio Malorum
Premeditatio malorum is a Stoic writing practice in which you deliberately imagine a specific loss — a person, a capacity, a role — in concrete detail, then inventory what is still present in your life right now. The mechanism is controlled exposure: naming a feared outcome in writing reduces its ambient threat and sharpens attention to what actually matters. It suits people who carry low-grade anticipatory anxiety or who want to clarify priorities without a crisis forcing the question.
15 min·Sitting·journalingAnxietyValues clarification+1OpenStoic Journaling
intermediate
Values Clarification
A structured written audit that names your core values, defines them in your own words, and compares them against what you actually did last week. Developed from Donald Robertson's integration of Stoic prohairesis with ACT values work (Hayes & Wilson), it is useful for anyone who suspects a gap between what they say matters and how they spend their time. Thirty minutes is the real minimum; the depth comes from sitting with that gap honestly, not from filling in a template quickly.
30 min·Sitting·journalingValues clarificationPurposeOpenStress & Sleep
beginner
4-7-8 Breath for Sleep Onset
A structured breathing pattern — inhale for 4 counts, hold for 7, exhale for 8 — performed lying down at bedtime to lower physiological arousal and ease sleep onset. The extended exhale engages the parasympathetic nervous system; the count gives the mind a concrete anchor instead of replaying the day. Four cycles is the ceiling, not a goal to push through.
5 min·Lying·scriptedSleepAnxiety+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Body Scan for Sleep
A slow, region-by-region attention sweep from feet to head, done in bed with no obligation to stay awake. Adapted from the MBSR body scan, this version treats falling asleep mid-practice as the intended outcome, not a lapse. It suits adults who lie awake with a busy mind or chronic pain and want a non-pharmacological wind-down. Use it only when you are already in bed and do not need to get up.
30 min·Lying·scriptedSleepStress+2OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Bootzin Stimulus Control
Bootzin Stimulus Control is a nightly rule set, not a single session, that rebuilds the brain's association between bed and sleep by restricting what the bed is used for and standardizing wake time. Developed by Richard Bootzin at the University of Arizona (1972), it is now a core component of CBT-I — the first-line insomnia treatment the American College of Physicians recommends over sleep medication. It works best for people whose insomnia is maintained by lying awake in bed, clock-watching, or variable sleep schedules.
30 min·Any·scriptedSleepRumination+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
CBT-I Sleep Diary
The consensus sleep diary (Carney et al., Sleep 2012;35(2):287-302) is the prospective self-monitoring instrument every evidence-based insomnia treatment runs on. It is the first thing a CBT-I provider asks for and the input that drives sleep restriction therapy. The AASM 2021 CBT-I Clinical Practice Guideline names it a required protocol component. The diary takes about five minutes each morning, kept for a minimum of two weeks before any other CBT-I tool can be calibrated. Recall-based sleep estimates are notoriously inaccurate — the diary is what makes the math work.
5 min·Sitting·journalingInsomniaSleep onset+2OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Cold-Water Face Splash
This practice uses cold water applied to the face and wrists to trigger the mammalian dive reflex, which activates the vagus nerve and slows heart rate within seconds. It is one of the fastest physiological tools available for acute anxiety or panic. It is drawn from Marsha Linehan's DBT TIPP skill and mirrors emergency protocols used for supraventricular tachycardia (SVT).
5 min·Standing·scriptedAnxietyStress+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Evening Wind-Down Ritual
A fixed nightly sequence — same steps, same order, every night — that trains the brain to associate the routine itself with sleep onset, reducing the effort required to fall asleep. Drawn from CBT for Insomnia (CBT-I), where stimulus control and sleep-hygiene consistency are primary active ingredients. Best suited for adults with chronic difficulty winding down, racing thoughts at bedtime, or irregular pre-sleep habits. Repetition is the mechanism; keep the sequence boring and stable.
45 min·Any·scriptedSleepStress+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Five-Minute Pleasant Recall (Short-Form Behavioral Activation)
A 5-minute behavioral-activation micro-practice designed for grief and low-mood states. Recall ONE pleasant memory of any size, write 2-3 sentences describing it concretely (where, when, who, sensory detail), then identify ONE specific small action today that touches the same sensory or relational quality. Different from the full Pleasant Activities Schedule (BATD-R; Lejuez et al., Behav Modif 35(2):111-161, 2011), which runs 15+ minutes and requires generating a 10-item brainstorm — this pared-down variant fits a 10-minute budget and meets members whose bandwidth is reduced by grief-related concentration difficulty, the cognitive load of a depressive episode, or simply a packed life. The mechanism is the same BA inversion: act first, then evaluate. Recall surfaces a felt-sense memory of pleasure or connection; the small chosen action couples that memory to a concrete next step in the present, restoring the behavior-precedes-mood loop that depression and grief disrupt. For bereaved members specifically (per APA Prolonged Grief CPG and Shear 2014), this format avoids the activation pitfall of forcing a brainstorm during acute grief while still preserving the activation-coupling between memory and action.
5 min·Sitting·journalingDepression recurrenceGrief processing+4OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Gratitude Before Bed
A brief nightly writing practice in which you record three things that went well during the day and one sentence explaining why each happened. Drawn from Martin Seligman's 'Three Good Things' exercise at UPenn, it has shown reductions in depressive symptoms and improvements in sleep quality across multiple replications. It works best for people prone to end-of-day rumination or a low-grade sense that nothing is going right. Five minutes is enough; the habit depends on keeping the notebook within arm's reach of the bed.
5 min·Sitting·journalingSleepDepression recurrence+2OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Morning Anxiety Reset
A structured, four-step physiological intervention drawn from Marsha Linehan's DBT TIPP skill, designed for the acute anxiety spike many adults experience in the early morning hours before full waking. It uses cold water, brief intense movement, extended-exhale breathing, and progressive muscle release to interrupt the freeze-and-ruminate cycle at the body level. Use it when you wake with a racing heart, dread, or looping thoughts and need to shift your nervous system before the day begins.
10 min·Any·scriptedAnxietyStress+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Pleasant Activities Schedule
The Pleasant Activities Schedule is the core skill of Behavioral Activation Treatment for Depression — Revised (BATD-R; Lejuez et al., Behav Modif 35(2):111-161, 2011), a treatment the APA Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Depression (2019) rates Grade A as a first-line standalone modality or paired with CBT. The mechanism inverts the depressive trap: depression tells you to wait until you feel better to act; behavioral activation has you act first, then evaluate. By scheduling small, concrete activities that historically produced even mild pleasure or mastery and rating predicted vs. actual enjoyment, you re-collect evidence that doing precedes feeling, not the other way around.
15 min·Sitting·journalingDepression recurrenceAnhedonia+2OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Progressive Muscle Relaxation
Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) cycles through major muscle groups — tensing each for 5 seconds, then releasing for 15 — so the body learns to recognize and produce the relaxation response on demand. Developed by Edmund Jacobson at Harvard (1929), it is now a standard component of CBT-I (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia) and general anxiety treatment. It is well-suited for people who carry tension they can't consciously locate, and for anyone who wants a reliable, body-based way to wind down before sleep.
20 min·Lying·scriptedSleepAnxiety+2OpenStress & Sleep
intermediate
Sleep Restriction Therapy
Sleep Restriction Therapy (Spielman, Saskin & Thorpy, Sleep 1987;10(1):45-56) is the most counterintuitive of the CBT-I components and one of the most effective. The AASM 2021 CBT-I Clinical Practice Guideline rates it Grade A as a recommended component. The protocol shrinks your time in bed to closely match the actual sleep you have been getting, building homeostatic sleep pressure so that the time in bed becomes consolidated sleep rather than fragmented wakefulness. The practice itself is short — calculation and commitment. The hard part lives in your actual schedule for the following weeks. Always run a two-week sleep diary first so the calculation is real.
5 min·Sitting·scriptedInsomniaSleep onset+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Vagal-Tone Breathing
Slow, equal-ratio breathing at roughly five breaths per minute — six seconds in, six seconds out — brings the cardiovascular system into a state researchers call resonance, measurably strengthening vagal tone and heart rate variability. Brown and Gerbarg at Columbia and NYMC documented clinical effects on stress, anxiety, PTSD, and depression near this rate (~5.5 bpm canonical resonance). It works sitting in any chair, requires no equipment after the first few sessions, and fits naturally before bed or after a stressful event.
10 min·Sitting·scriptedStressAnxiety+2OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Weak-Ties Activation for Low Mood
This is a five-minute behavioral activation micro-practice for low mood, built on the finding that brief, low-stakes contact with weak ties — acquaintances, not close friends — reliably lifts daily mood and reduces felt isolation (Sandstrom & Dunn, Pers Soc Psychol Bull 2014;40(7):910-922). The APA Clinical Practice Guideline for Treatment of Depression (2019) includes social-activity activation as a behavioral component of first-line BA. Unlike its longer loneliness-focused cousin, this version is sized for a depressed day: identify one tie you already saw, take one small action, note the response. The point is initiation, not connection depth.
5 min·Any·scriptedDepression recurrenceSocial isolation+2OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Worry Window
Worry Window is a structured CBT technique for containing anxiety and rumination: you schedule one 15-minute slot earlier in the evening to write down every worry, then actively defer any worry that surfaces outside that window to a short 'tomorrow's list.' The containment works because worries are acknowledged rather than suppressed, but they are no longer free to run all day or ambush you at bedtime. It is especially useful for people whose minds race when they lie down to sleep.
15 min·Sitting·journalingAnxietyRumination+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Worst-Case Rehearsal
A structured writing practice drawn from the Stoic premeditatio malorum — deliberately imagining a feared outcome in full detail, then mapping what you would actually do and what would remain. It works on the chronic background worries that keep circling without resolution, not acute crises. Most people find that a worry spelled out completely is less powerful than the same worry left vague.
10 min·Sitting·journalingAnxietyRumination+1OpenStress & Sleep
beginner
Yoga Nidra
yoga nidra
Yoga nidra is a guided body-scan protocol conducted in the hypnagogic state — the threshold between waking and sleep — where the body rests fully while attention remains lightly active. Stanford's Andrew Huberman repackaged the same protocol as Non-Sleep Deep Rest (NSDR); EEG work and NIMHANS clinical studies document reductions in sleep latency, anxiety, and autonomic arousal. It suits anyone dealing with chronic stress, poor sleep, or accumulated physical tension, and works best at the end of the day or after a demanding afternoon.
30 min·Lying·guided-imagerySleepStress+2Open
Clusters: Foundations · Life Seasons · Micro-Practices · Stoic Journaling · Stress & Sleep