I’ll be honest—my relationship with evening meditation routines started out… kinda pathetic.
Like, I had this idea in my head that I’d turn into one of those calm, glowing humans who drinks chamomile tea and whispers “I release the day” before drifting into perfect sleep.
Reality?
I fell asleep mid-meditation… snoring.
Once woke myself up.
10/10 embarrassing.
And for a while, I thought—yeah, this isn’t for me. I’m just not a “meditation person.” You ever feel like that? Like your brain just refuses to chill?
But here’s the weird part…
When I stuck with it (and by “stuck with it” I mean lowered my expectations dramatically), something shifted.
Not in a magical, Instagram-worthy way.
More like…
I stopped lying awake replaying awkward conversations from 2012.
Which, honestly? Huge win.
?? The Night My Brain Wouldn’t Shut Up (aka my breaking point)
Okay, quick story.
There was this one night—I remember it way too clearly—I was lying in bed, staring at the ceiling, and my brain decided to host a full TED Talk on:
- That email I sent earlier (was it too aggressive??)
- What I should eat tomorrow
- Whether penguins have knees (they do, by the way—look it up)
It was chaos.
And I thought, this cannot be how sleep works for adults. Like… we’re just supposed to lay here and think about penguin anatomy until we pass out?
That’s when I started taking evening meditation routines seriously.
Not in a “change my life overnight” way.
More like… okay, what if I just sit still for five minutes and breathe like a semi-functional human?
?? What Evening Meditation Routines Actually Feel Like (Not What Instagram Shows You)
Let’s clear something up.
Meditation at night is not:
- Floating into cosmic bliss
- Hearing angelic background music
- Becoming instantly enlightened
It’s more like:
- “Oh wow, my back hurts.”
- “Am I breathing weird?”
- “Why am I thinking about pizza again??”
And yet… it works.
Not because it’s perfect.
But because it slows things down just enough.

?? My Go-To Evening Meditation Routine (aka the one I don’t quit after 2 days)
1. The “Just Sit There” Method
No pressure. No timer at first.
I literally sit on my bed, lean against the wall, and exist.
That’s it.
Sometimes I close my eyes. Sometimes I question my entire life.
But this tiny pause? It signals my brain:
“Hey… we’re not scrolling anymore. Chill.”
2. Breathing… but make it slightly intentional
I used to overcomplicate this.
Now I just do:
- Inhale for 4
- Hold for 2
- Exhale for 6
And I don’t even count properly half the time.
It’s messy breathing.
But it works.
And weirdly, this is where I start noticing my body relaxing—like unclenching muscles I didn’t even know were tense (looking at you, jaw).
3. The “Brain Dump Without Judgment” Thing
Okay, this part is underrated.
I just let thoughts happen.
No fighting. No “I must be calm.”
If my brain wants to think about:
- Work stress
- Random childhood memories
- That embarrassing thing I said last week
Fine. Go ahead.
But I don’t chase the thoughts.
It’s like watching weird TV channels without picking up the remote.
And somehow… they fade.
Not instantly. But eventually.
4. The Lazy Body Scan (because I’m not that disciplined)
You know those guided meditations where they say:
“Now feel your left pinky toe…”
Yeah. I lose patience.
So I do a shortcut version:
- Face → relax
- Shoulders → drop
- Chest → soften
- Legs → heavy
Done.
Takes maybe 2 minutes.

And suddenly I feel like a melted candle.
?? The Unexpected Thing: Better Sleep Was Just the Beginning
Here’s where it gets interesting.
I started these evening meditation routines for sleep, right?
But the bigger surprise?
My mornings got better.
Like… noticeably.
- Less groggy
- Less “why am I alive” energy
- More… steady?
It wasn’t like I turned into a morning person overnight (let’s not get carried away), but I stopped feeling like I got hit by a truck every morning.
?? Why This Actually Works (without sounding like a science textbook)
Okay, I’ll keep this simple because I’m not about to turn into a lecture.
Evening meditation routines help because:
- Your brain gets a signal: “we’re winding down”
- Your nervous system chills out (finally)
- You stop feeding the anxiety loop right before bed
It’s like dimming the lights in your mind.
Instead of going from full chaos → sleep, you get a transition.
And apparently, humans like transitions. Who knew.
?? The Mistakes I Made (so you don’t repeat my nonsense)
Let me save you some time.
❌ Trying to be perfect
I thought I had to sit still, think nothing, and “do it right.”
Nope.
The messier it is, the more real it feels.
❌ Doing it for too long
I once tried a 30-minute meditation at night.
Bad idea.
I got bored. Then annoyed. Then hungry.
Start with 5–10 minutes. Seriously.
❌ Expecting instant results
This one got me.
I tried it for two nights and thought:
“Yeah, I’m still tired. Scam.”
But around day 5 or 6? Something clicked.
Not dramatically. Just… quietly better.
?? The Routine I Use Now (realistic version)
If I had to explain my current nighttime mindfulness routine to someone, it’d go like this:
- Put phone away (or at least pretend to)
- Sit on bed like a tired human
- Breathe weirdly but consistently
- Let brain do its chaotic thing
- Relax body in a lazy way
- Lie down before I overthink it
That’s it.
No candles. No “I am one with the universe.”
Just… small, doable steps.
?? Random Things That Helped (that no one told me)
- Keeping the lights low before starting (big difference)
- Not checking the time every 2 minutes
- Accepting that some nights will still suck
Because yeah… even with the best evening meditation routines, some nights your brain just goes:
“We’re thinking about everything. Good luck.”
And that’s okay.
?? A couple random things you might enjoy (because why not)
If you’re curious, I once stumbled on this blog that explains meditation in a super normal way:
👉 https://zenhabits.net/meditation/
And if you want something slightly funnier and less serious:
👉 https://www.thecut.com/article/how-to-meditate.html
Both helped me realize I wasn’t doing it “wrong”—just… human.
