The first time I seriously tried meditation techniques to transform your mind, I sat down, crossed my legs like I’d seen in movies, closed my eyes, and within 10 seconds—
zzzzzzzzzzzzz
Mosquito.
And suddenly I wasn’t becoming enlightened. I was in a full-blown war.
You ever try to be peaceful while plotting revenge? Yeah. Doesn’t work.
But here’s the weird part—I kept trying. Not because I suddenly became disciplined (lol, no), but because something tiny shifted. Like… my brain paused for half a second one day. And that half-second? Felt like magic.
So if you’re someone who thinks, “Meditation isn’t for me, my brain is too loud,” congrats—you’re exactly like me.
Let me walk you through the stuff that actually helped. Not the perfect Instagram stuff. The messy, real-life kind.
1. The “Just Breathe, Dude” Technique
No fancy name. No incense required.
Just… breathe.
Inhale.
Exhale.
Repeat.
Sounds stupid simple, right? That’s because it is.
But the trick is noticing your breath—not controlling it like you’re in a yoga class audition. Just watching it. Like you’re low-key spying on your lungs.
I used to count my breaths.
Then I’d forget the number halfway through and panic like I failed a test.
Spoiler: you didn’t fail anything.
That moment you notice you got distracted? That is the practice.
2. Body Scan (AKA “Why Is My Shoulder Always Tense?”)
This one surprised me.
You basically lie down and mentally scan your body from head to toe. Like you’re checking for hidden stress monsters.
And wow… they’re everywhere.
Jaw? Tight.
Shoulders? Basically rocks.
Toes? Weirdly angry.
I didn’t realize how much tension I carry until I slowed down enough to notice it.

It’s kinda like when you realize you’ve been clenching your teeth all day for no reason. (Why do we do that??)
3. Walking Meditation (For People Who Can’t Sit Still… hi)
If sitting still feels like punishment, this is your escape.
Go for a slow walk.
And I mean slow. Like suspiciously slow.
Pay attention to:
- Your steps
- The ground
- Random sounds
- That one dog barking like it’s got opinions
At first, I felt ridiculous. Like, “Am I doing this right? Why am I walking like a confused turtle?”
But then something clicks.
You’re still… but moving.
And your brain? Finally shuts up a little.
4. The “Label Your Thoughts” Trick
This one is sneaky genius.
Whenever a thought pops up, just label it:
- “Thinking”
- “Worrying”
- “Planning”
- “Overthinking again, cool cool cool”
It creates this tiny distance between you and your thoughts.
Because here’s the thing no one tells you—
you are NOT your thoughts.
You’re the person watching them.
That realization? Kinda wild.
5. Guided Meditation (Because Silence Is… A Lot)
Okay, real talk—silence can be uncomfortable.
Like, too quiet.
Like, “Why can I hear my heartbeat?” quiet.
That’s where guided meditations save the day.
Someone talks you through it. Keeps your brain from wandering into “what should I eat for dinner” territory.
I used apps. YouTube. Random recordings.
Honestly? Didn’t matter.
What mattered was not feeling alone in my own head.
6. Visualization (AKA Daydreaming with Purpose)
This one feels like cheating.
You imagine a place:
- A beach
- A forest
- Your childhood home (minus the awkward memories)
Add details:
The sound of waves.
The smell of rain.
That weird comfort of a familiar place.
And suddenly your brain goes, “Oh… we’re safe.”
It’s powerful.
Also slightly addictive.
7. The 5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Trick
This one is magic during anxiety spirals.
You name:
- 5 things you see
- 4 things you feel
- 3 things you hear
- 2 things you smell
- 1 thing you taste
It pulls you out of your head and drops you back into reality.
I’ve used this in the middle of chaotic days, awkward meetings, even once in a grocery store aisle (don’t ask).
It works.
Every time.
8. Mantra Meditation (Yes, It Feels Weird at First)
Pick a word or phrase.
Repeat it.
Silently or out loud.
Mine used to be “calm.”
Then it became “just chill, man.”
(Progress?)
It’s like giving your brain a bone to chew on so it stops biting everything else.
9. Journaling Meditation (For the Overthinkers)
Not all meditation is sitting still.
Sometimes it’s dumping your brain onto paper.
Messy thoughts. Half sentences. Random complaints.
No structure.
No judgment.
I once wrote three pages about being annoyed at a spoon.
A spoon.
By the end of it, I felt lighter.
Explain that.
10. The “Do Nothing” Meditation (My Personal Favorite… and Worst Enemy)
Sit.
Do nothing.
No phone.
No distractions.
Just… exist.
Sounds easy.
It is NOT.
Your brain will throw everything at you:
- Old memories
- Future worries
- That embarrassing thing from 2009
But if you stay…
Something shifts.
Not dramatically. Not like fireworks.
Just a quiet… okayness.
And honestly? That’s enough.
Where You’ll Probably Struggle (Because I Did)
Let’s be real for a second.
You’ll get distracted.
You’ll think you’re doing it wrong.
I still do.
Some days I sit down to meditate and end up planning my entire week instead.
Other days? It clicks.
And those days keep me coming back.
Random Things That Helped Me Stick With It
- Doing it for 2 minutes instead of 20
- Not caring if it was “perfect”
- Letting it be messy (like everything else in life)
- Accepting that some days just won’t work
Also… pairing it with coffee.

I don’t know why. It just works.
(Side Note) You Know What Meditation Kind of Feels Like?
That moment when:
- Your phone finally stops buzzing
- You sit down after a long day
- And for 3 seconds… everything is quiet
That.
That’s it.
Meditation just helps you find that moment on purpose.
Outbound Links You Might Enjoy
- A surprisingly honest take on meditation struggles: “Why Meditation Is Harder Than It Looks” (search it—you’ll relate instantly)
- Or just go down a YouTube rabbit hole of “funny meditation fails”… trust me
Final Thought (Not a Fancy Conclusion, Just… Real Talk)
I used to think meditation meant becoming some ultra-calm, zen, never-stressed human.
Like a monk on a mountain.
Yeah… no.
For me, it just means:
- Reacting a little less
- Breathing a little more
- Not losing my mind over small stuff (as often)
And honestly?
That’s already a huge win.
