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Breathe & Be: Tools for Everyday Calm

18 Friday Jul 2025

Posted by conifer2014 in Uncategorized

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health, meditation, mental-health, mindfulness, wellness




Breathe & Be: Tools for Everyday Calm
Simple, proven practices to support your mental and emotional well-being.

BODY SCAN – Feel more grounded in your body.

A body scan is a mindfulness technique that guides your attention slowly through each part of your body—from head to toe—helping you notice sensations without judgment. This practice enhances interoceptive awareness and helps regulate the nervous system.

Why it helps: A clinical trial from the University of Massachusetts Medical School (Kabat-Zinn et al., 1998) found that participants practicing mindfulness-based stress reduction (including body scanning) experienced a 38% reduction in anxiety and a 58% reduction in overall stress symptoms over eight weeks.

Good for: Slowing racing thoughts, easing tension, and improving your ability to rest.

Try it when: You feel disconnected, restless, or overwhelmed.

Why people love it: It meets you where you are. You don’t need to change anything—just pay attention, and let your body do the talking.

Body Scan
Recording & Script

GUIDED MEDITATION – Let your mind rest in a tranquil space.

Guided meditation uses storytelling, voice, and visualization to lead the mind into a focused, relaxed state. Nature-based meditation often draws on imagery from forests, rivers, or landscapes to elicit a sense of spaciousness and peace.

Why it helps: A 2011 Harvard and Massachusetts General Hospital study (Holzel et al.) found that eight weeks of guided mindfulness meditation produced tangible, positive structural changes in brain regions associated with critical mental health and cognitive processes. These findings highlight the concept of neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to reorganize itself by forming new neural connections throughout life.

Good for: Expanding perspective, easing emotional overload, and reconnecting to your inner calm.

Try it when: You feel stuck in your head, need a break from screens, or want to reset your energy.

Why people love it: It feels like a mini retreat. Even 10 minutes can help you return clearer, calmer, and more connected.

Guided Meditation
Recording & Script



BREATHWORK – Shift your state in just a few breaths.

Breathwork refers to intentional breathing patterns designed to influence your physical and emotional state. Techniques like bee’s breath, Ujjayi – ocean breath, 3-part breathing or 4-6 breathing engage the parasympathetic nervous system, promoting calm and clarity.

Why it helps: A 2017 study published in Frontiers in Psychology (Zaccaro et al.) confirmed that slow, deep breathing reduces blood pressure, lowers cortisol, and balances nervous system within minutes.

Good for: Quick resets, emotional regulation, and calming the body during or after a stressful moment.

Try it when: You need to pause before reacting, want to start or end your day with intention, or feel tension rising.

Why people love it: It’s practically instant. No equipment, no schedule. Your breath goes where you go.

Stay connected at jenwilliams.online/yoga

BODY SCAN: Softening the Body, Quieting the Mind

18 Friday Jul 2025

Posted by conifer2014 in Uncategorized

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Tags

health, meditation, mental-health, mindfulness, wellness

BODY SCAN: Softening the Body, Quieting the Mind
10-minute guided script for seated or supported reclined posture

Let’s begin by finding a comfortable seat.
If it feels safe, please close your eyes gently.
And if not, please soften your gaze downward.
Let’s write this little love note to ourselves: At this moment, I am quieting my mind.

Continuing to nestle into the practice,
don’t feel a need to sit upright or with perfect posture, just with self-care.
Let your back be long but without forcing any holding.
Your feet can rest on the floor. And your hands can rest gently in your lap or by your sides.

We begin our body scan simply—by arriving.
Feel the contact your body makes with the surface beneath you.
The seat, the ground. Gravity at work.
Let yourself feel held.

Take a slow breath in…
and exhale out the mouth.
One more—inhale fully…
and exhale…
letting any need to perform or prove begin to melt away.

Now, we are fully present to our body, our selves in this space. Just as we are.

Bring your attention to the crown of your head,
Noticing the place where you meet the air.
Let that space soften… imagine as if the very top of your head could expand just slightly.

Move your focus down to your hairline and temples,
do you notice tightness here?
We often clench without realizing.
Let awareness begin to soothe that holding.

Now focus on the forehead—see if you can smooth the brow.
Feel the space between your eyebrows.
This is often where we hold concentration, concern, tension.
Soften. Soften again.

Shift your awareness to the eyes,
See if they’re still trying to work, shapes and colors conjuring themselves in the darkness.
Let the lids flutter a moment, soften, closed but not clenched.
They don’t need to be at work right now.

Now notice the cheeks, jaw, and mouth.
Unhinge your jaw, gently shifting left to right for just a moment.
Let the tongue gently rest behind the front teeth, at the roof of your mouth.
Letting go through the throat, gently swallow once or twice.
There are no words needed, nothing you need to say right now.

Bring attention to the length of your neck, the front, the sides, and the back.
This is a narrow bridge where our tension often resides.
Invite a sense of lightness and spaciousness here.
Imagine your breath gently expanding this space from the inside.

Now center your thoughts on the shoulders.
Scan the ridgeline of both shoulders with gentle awareness.
We carry so much here,
responsibility, expectation,
it is here, that we’ve learned to brace for impact.
Let all that weight roll off.
Let the shoulders relax, settle, dropping ever so slightly.

Now notice the upper arms, biceps, triceps,
The mind’s eye traveling down to the elbows, the forearms, wrists…
and into your capable hands—notice the back of the hands, the palms, fingers, fingertips.
Notice if you’re gripping. For a moment, stretch the fingers out wide,
and let them soften completely.
Let the hands become heavy and still.

Return briefly to your chest.
Feel the natural lift and fall of the breath.
Don’t change it, just notice it.
Let your awareness rest within the ribs and breastbone…
Just let it be seen.

Now navigate to the upper back,
the muscles around your spine, the space behind the lungs.
Let the breath move through these areas—expanding, releasing, expanding, and releasing.

Bring awareness to the abdomen and belly.
No need for holding it in or tightening unconsciously.
See if you can soften the belly. Let it be without judgment, and receive the breath.
Let this center be soft, ebbing and flowing, just as it is.

Now the lower back,
Let’s release this container of stress.
Imagine the breath filling this space
with a radiating release of warmth and ease.

Now the pelvis and hips,
Let your attention linger here.
Mindful of the sit bones, the hip sockets, the glutes.
Notice any places of tightness.
Let them melt—one layer at a time.

Bring awareness to the thighs,
the front, the back, the sides.
Let them feel weighted, resting.

Now the knees, shins, and calves, notice any points of contact.
Let the complete length of your legs be heavy and still.

Move into the ankles, and finally the feet,
tops, soles, heels, toes.
This is your foundation.
For now, let’s extend just a moment of gratitude and stillness.

We are present, here and now.
From the crown of your head to the soles of your feet,
you are aware, awake, and at ease.

Take a breath in through the nose…
and out through the mouth.
Once more. Lengthen the exhalation.

Begin to bring small movements back into your body.
Notice the points of contact between you and your seat, the ground beneath you.
Wiggle your fingers and toes.
Roll your shoulders ever so gently.
Invite motion, but no rush.

And when you’re ready…
let your eyes slowly open.

Return to the space you’re in,
bringing with you the steadiness and the softness
that you just carved into this beautiful day.

FOREST MEDITATION: “Into the Quiet Woods”

18 Friday Jul 2025

Posted by conifer2014 in Uncategorized

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Tags

health, meditation, mental-health, mindfulness, wellness


GUIDED FOREST MEDITATION: “Into the Quiet Woods”
Six-minute guided script for a seated posture. 

Begin by finding a comfortable seat.
Let your feet make contact with the ground—solid, simple, sure.
Let your hands rest in your lap or along your sides.
Gently close your eyes if that feels safe. Or just soften your gaze.

Let your breath come as it is.
No performance, no improvement.
Just breath…
just this moment.

Now, allow yourself to imagine…
You are sitting at the edge of a quiet forest.
It’s early morning.
There’s no urgency here. No tasks.
Just you, and the woods.

Notice the air. Cool, fresh, slightly damp with dew.
Let yourself breathe it in.

Beneath you, the ground is firm and steady.
You may feel moss or soft earth below.
The forest holds you—not tightly, not loosely. Just enough.

Now begin to notice sound.
Black capped chickadee calls, and then fades into the distance.
A quarrel among chipmunks in branches high above.
A breeze moves gently through the leaves.
And underneath it all… stillness.

As you sit here, you are not a visitor.
You belong here.
You are part of this place.
This forest is not asking anything of you.
Let your senses open wider.

Notice the light filtering through the canopy.
The smell of pine and rain-soaked earth,
Noticing—without judgment—what it feels like to simply sit and witness this unfolding.

You may begin to feel a quiet in your chest…
a slowing in the breath…
Breath you hadn’t noticed was here all along
And a sense of steadiness, and assurance in the bones.

The forest is at work.
It doesn’t fix you.
It reminds you.

Of your natural pace.
Of your enough-ness.
Of your natural ability to rest and be present… without solving.

Now, imagine walking slowly down a forest trail.
Each step is deliberate, soft.
Held gently by the weathered igneous and mineral-rich soil underfoot.
No destination, just the act of forward movement.
Open space and crisp air.

You arrive at a bubbling mountain brook,
The water is running over millennia-rounded granite.
You pause here, beside a sugar maple so wide, you’d need three friends to reach around it.
There is nothing to do, nothing weighing on you.

Only to be.
To remember that calm is not somewhere else.
It’s right here, right now. Accessible within you.

Let yourself linger in this space a little longer.
Let the quiet settle around your shoulders.
Let the steadiness reach down into your legs, into your spine, into your breath.

Now slowly, begin to return.
Feel the ground beneath you once more.
Feel the air above and cradling you, all around.
Hear the sounds in this moment, in this space around you.

Take one slow inhale through the nose…
and exhale out the mouth.

Wiggle your fingers.
Ever so gently shift in your seat.
Let your eyes reopen slowly, when you’re ready.

Bring the stillness of the forest with you.
Not as something separate,
but as something you can always access within.

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