(Low energy • Bed/sofa friendly • No fixing required)
Grounding isn’t about “calming down properly”
It’s about helping your body feel safe enough to soften — even a little.
On flare days, less is more.
🫁 1. Ground Through Breath (Without Forcing It)
You don’t need deep breathing if that feels like effort.
Try this instead:
- Place one hand on your chest
- One hand on your belly
- Breathe normally, just noticing the rise and fall
If you can:
- Exhale slightly longer than you inhale
- Even 1–2 longer exhales can help the nervous system downshift
✨ No control. Just awareness.
🪨 2. Name What’s Holding You
Silently or out loud, name:
- What your body is touching
- Where it’s supported
Examples:
- “My back is against the sofa”
- “My legs are resting”
- “The bed is holding my weight”
This tells your nervous system:
I’m not falling. I’m supported.
❄️ 3. Gentle Temperature Anchors
Strong cold isn’t always right in a flare — grounding can be subtle.
Try:
- A cool flannel on the face
- A warm mug held in both hands
- A hot water bottle on the belly or lower back
Temperature gives the brain something concrete to focus on.
👂 4. One Sound at a Time
Instead of scanning everything, pick one sound:
- A clock ticking
- A fan
- Birds outside
- Distant traffic
Let that sound be your anchor for 30–60 seconds.
No analysing. Just listening.
🤲 5. Muscle Drop (Not Muscle Tensing)
Rather than “relaxing” everything, try:
- Lift your shoulders slightly
- Let them drop
- Unclench the jaw
- Let the tongue rest in the mouth
Small releases tell the body:
We’re allowed to let go here.
🌱 6. Orient to “Now”
When symptoms are intense, the brain often time-travels:
- “Will this pass?”
- “What if it gets worse?”
Gently bring it back with:
- “Right now, I am safe.”
- “Right now, I am breathing.”
- “Right now, nothing else is required.”
This isn’t positive thinking.
It’s nervous system orientation.
🧠 7. For Brain Fog Days
If thoughts feel scrambled:
- Name 3 things you can see
- 2 things you can feel
- 1 thing you can hear
That’s it. Stop there.
More is not better.
🤍 If You Can Do Only One Thing
Lie down.
Support your joints.
Let your body be heavy.
Grounding doesn’t have to look calm.
It just has to feel a little safer than before.
Grounding isn’t about fixing your body — it’s about reminding it that it’s not in danger.
