Showing posts with label Breathing Techniques. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breathing Techniques. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 April 2026

How To Practice Mindfulness: 5 Simple Techniques For Living In The Moment


Quite often, you probably think about your past and worry about your future. That makes it hard to enjoy life in the present. Learning to be mindful and living in the moment will help you appreciate your life more, and reduce those feelings of anxiety, stress and depression. 

 

Here are 5 techniques to help you practice mindfulness and live in the moment: 


1. Take note of your current surroundings. 

 

The first step in living in the moment is to notice your surroundings. You may not often take the time to look around and see what goes on around you. Sit down and take a deep breath. Then look at everything around you. 


  • If you are indoors, what do the walls look like?
  • What patterns do you see in the ceiling and floor?
  • How many windows are in the room?
  • How many ceiling lights or other lights can you see from your position?

 

When you stop and look more closely at your surroundings, and take in all that is around you, then you are more equipped to live in the moment. 

 

2. Begin to use self-care activities.

 

Another thing to put you in the present moment is doing activities that bring you joy and bring forth positive emotions. You might engage in a hobby you like, walk in nature, or spend time with family or friends. These activities all may make you feel happiness and a focus on the present moment. 

 

You need also to be mindful of your typical daily routine. Make some time for activities of self-care, like eating healthy meals or doing breathing exercises. 

 

3. Try to detach yourself from your phone whenever possible. 

 

In this age of smartphones, it seems that we live in fear of having idle time. You may grab your phone while waiting for a friend to arrive for lunch, or while you wait at a doctor’s office. 

 

Break that habit. Allow yourself to just sit and look around you, instead of checking in on social media. You can start this new habit when you wake up in the morning. After you get out of bed, don’t go for your phone immediately. Enjoy a few moments of peace and quiet and have a cup of tea or coffee. Or you can spend time in the morning with your family before the computer and phone call to you.

 

4. Use simple breathing exercises.

 

Mindful breathing may sound simple, but it’s a powerful tool to use when you manage your emotions, learn to live in the moment and improve your mental wellness. 


Breathwork has the ability to teach you how to pay closer attention to the sensations your body experiences daily. It usually has you focus on inhaling and exhaling, along with the sound your breath makes and the ways in which your body responds to breathing. 


5. Let go of your worry. 

 

It’s easy to say, “don’t worry,” but much harder to accomplish. Worrying today is not going to change what you encounter tomorrow. Each second spent worrying about your future is one second you have wasted in the present. Worrying removes you from living in the present and leaves you thinking about all the possibilities in your future. In that state, you cannot live in the moment. 

 

If you have circumstances that trouble you, focus on the ways you might solve existing problems now. Improve the moment you’re in. When you spend time focusing on what could happen in the future, it robs you of the experience of what is occurring now. Each moment in your present life moves very quickly – you don’t want to miss it. 

 

Conclusion

 

When you practice mindfulness to help you live in the moment, it can enhance your daily life. It promotes other positive emotions like contentment, happiness and gratitude. You can cultivate this skill if you are dedicated, and practice mindfulness consistently.

 

Using the techniques in this article, you can begin to live in the moment instead of worrying about the future. 

 

References

 

https://psychcentral.com/blog/what-it-really-means-to-be-in-the-present-moment#tips-for-being-more-present

https://www.betterhelp.com/advice/general/simple-tips-for-learning-to-live-in-the-present/

https://www.verywellmind.com/how-do-you-live-in-the-present-5204439

 


Tuesday, 4 November 2025

5 Common Public Speaking Mistakes


Even though most people don’t enjoy public speaking, there are strategies to doing it well. You don’t have to be a professional speaker to make an impact on your audience. One way to feel most comfortable speaking in front of others is to recognize and avoid these top 5 mistakes.


1. Memorizing or reading your entire presentation. 

 

Your audience came to hear you speak to them - not read or deliver a rote, memorized performance. Your responsibility is to communicate with your audience, not at them. By treating your audience as if you were having a conversation in your living room, you will find that you are much more comfortable and in better control of your nervousness. 


2. Not knowing your material.

 

If you are not familiar with your words or how your speech or presentation is meant to flow, then you are likely to make more errors. Making a mistake or two is not the issue - making a lot of them is! 


3. Speaking too fast.

 

Controlling your speed is extremely important if you expect your audience to be able to understand what you are saying. Listening to someone move at 100 mph takes much more energy than listening to them at 75! Incidentally, talking at a furious pace saps your energy as well. 


4. Staring at an object on the wall. 

 

You should not focus your attention on a spot on the wall or above the heads of your audience. Look the audience in the eye. Make that contact with your listeners, and you will then be aware of their reaction to you. Remember, public speaking is a form of communication. If you are not making eye contact, then you are not communicating. 


5. Running Out of Air.

 

Breathlessness on the podium is one of the most common mistakes made because many novice speakers do not think to breathe. If you wait until you are totally out of breath, you will then be required to inhale a huge amount of air in order to fill your lungs. In doing so, you will experience breathlessness and a tightness in your chest. My advice is to learn to breathe with the support of your diaphragm - truly the best means of controlling nervousness - and then practice supplementing your air supply before you are depleted. 

 

These 5 common mistakes can be easily rectified if you know your material, converse with your audience, learn how to control your speed, make eye contact with your listeners and remember to breathe.