Start — say what you will do
Write one sentence: “For four minutes I will only [draft paragraph / review rows 10–20].” Close unrelated tabs.
Here, mindfulness means noticing what is happening right now—your body, breath, and sounds—and then choosing your next task. Each exercise takes one to four minutes. These are secular focus habits, not psychotherapy or medical treatment.
Educational content · About this publisher · Not mental health counseling
Try the 5-Senses Check-In
When your head is full of worry, naming what you see, hear, and feel can pull you back to the present. You can keep your eyes open—this works fine at a desk.
Doing one task at a time usually means fewer mistakes and less stress. Block four minutes for a single job and ignore everything else.
Write one sentence: “For four minutes I will only [draft paragraph / review rows 10–20].” Close unrelated tabs.
When you want to check chat or email, notice it, say “thinking” to yourself, and go back. Wandering is normal—coming back is the point.
Mark what you finished, stretch your fingers, and decide your next block or break. Small wins add up.
Tap a card below to see the steps. None of them require closing your eyes or announcing “meditation” to coworkers. They are about noticing your body, sounds, or thoughts—and then getting back to work on purpose. Try one card a day for a week. If you feel wired before focusing, do two minutes of slow breathing on our Breathing page first.
Feel your feet on the floor or footrest. Move your attention up: calves, thighs, how the chair feels, your back, your hands on the keyboard, shoulders, jaw. Where you feel tight, soften that spot as you breathe out—no forcing. This pulls you out of spinning about tomorrow’s deadlines and back into the present.
You can label what you notice quietly—“pressure,” “warm,” “tight”—without judging it. Finish by making one small fix: drop your shoulders, relax your jaw, or sit your hips fully back in the chair.
Keep your eyes open. For thirty seconds, notice the farthest sound you can hear—AC, traffic, voices down the hall. Then thirty seconds on the closest sound—typing, your breath, your chair. Switch twice. It helps one stressful thought not take over your whole head.
Especially helpful between back-to-back video calls when your eyes are tired and closing them feels uncomfortable.
When a distracting thought pops up—“I forgot that email”—give it a simple name: “planning,” “worry,” or “remembering.” Naming it makes it easier to let go and return to your task. Set a timer for four minutes; each time you drift, label the thought and come back—no need to beat yourself up.
Many people find this helps them stop jumping between browser tabs during focused work.
Check off each practice—over time you will see what works best before meetings or after lunch.
After harsh feedback or a missed deadline, self-criticism can spike stress. A compassionate pause is not excuse-making—it is resetting so you can respond professionally.
Place a hand on your chest or forearm. Say quietly: “This is a stressful moment. Many people feel pressure here. I can take one steady breath and choose my next step.” Take three slow breaths, then write the smallest next action on a sticky note.
| Date | Practice |
|---|---|
| Jun 24, 2026 | Five-sense check-in |
| Jun 25, 2026 | 4-minute focus block |
| Jun 26, 2026 | Compassionate pause |
These exercises are secular attention training. Use language that fits your workplace culture.
Wandering is normal. Success is noticing wander and returning—often many times per minute at first.