I didn’t start doing daily mindfulness techniques because I’m some enlightened, yoga-at-sunrise kind of person.
I started because one random Tuesday I forgot where I parked my car… in a parking lot with, like, 40 cars.
Forty.
I walked in circles for 20 minutes. At one point I genuinely thought, “Did someone steal it?” Nope. Just my brain doing its usual chaos thing.
That’s when it hit me—I wasn’t actually present for most of my day. I was just… fast-forwarding through life like a badly edited movie.
And yeah, I know “mindfulness” sounds like something people with perfect lives talk about. But honestly? It’s just small stuff. Weirdly small stuff.
Like noticing your coffee is hot before it burns your tongue.
Groundbreaking, I know.
Anyway—these are the 7 things I started doing. Not perfectly. Not every day. But enough that my brain stopped acting like a browser with 47 tabs open (and one of them playing music… somewhere).
1. The “Wait… what am I doing?” pause
This one is embarrassingly simple.
A couple times a day, I just stop and ask myself:
“Wait… what am I doing right now?”
Not in a deep, philosophical crisis way. Just casually.
Because half the time, I’ll realize I’m:
- Scrolling Instagram while eating
- Thinking about work while texting someone
- Walking into a room and forgetting why (classic)
So I pause. Just for like… 10 seconds.
And then I go, “Okay. I’m drinking coffee. That’s it. Just coffee.”
It sounds dumb, but it kinda pulls me back into reality.
Like hitting a reset button on your brain.

2. Mindful breathing (but not in a weird way)
I used to think mindful breathing meant sitting cross-legged and becoming one with the universe.
Nope.
For me, it’s more like:
“Inhale… okay… exhale… okay… why is my neighbor drilling again?”
And that’s fine.
I just try to notice 3–5 breaths. That’s it.
Sometimes I count:
- Inhale: 1
- Exhale: 2
And somewhere around 3, my brain goes, “Hey remember that embarrassing thing from 2012?” 🙃
But instead of spiraling, I just go back to the breath.
No judgment. No drama.
Just… breathing like a normal human.
3. The “phone down, life up” rule (I fail at this a lot)
Okay, this one? I’m still bad at it.
Like, really bad.
But when I get it right, it changes everything.
The rule is simple:
When you’re doing something—just do that thing.
- Eating? Just eat.
- Talking? Just talk.
- Walking? Just walk.
Not:
Eat + scroll + reply + think + exist in mild panic
I once tried eating dinner without my phone and it felt illegal. Like I was missing something urgent.
I wasn’t.
The world survived. My WhatsApp group survived. Even the memes waited.
And weirdly… the food tasted better.
Coincidence? I don’t think so.
4. The “notice 5 things” trick
This is my go-to when my brain is spiraling.
You know those moments when your thoughts go:
“What if this goes wrong? And then that happens? And then everything collapses???”
Yeah. Those.
So I do this:
Look around and name 5 things you can see.
- A chair
- A window
- A weird stain on the wall (don’t ask)
- My laptop
- A plant that’s somehow still alive
Then 4 things you can feel.
Then 3 things you can hear.
And suddenly, I’m not in some imaginary disaster anymore—I’m just… here.
Alive. Breathing. Slightly confused, but okay.

5. Mindful walking (a.k.a. don’t rush like you’re late for life)
I used to walk like I was in a race I didn’t sign up for.
Fast. Always fast.
Even when I had nowhere important to be.
One day I slowed down (mostly because I was tired, let’s be honest), and I noticed stuff:
- The sound of leaves
- A dog just vibing on the sidewalk
- Someone laughing loudly for no reason
And it hit me—there’s a whole world happening that I usually miss because I’m speed-running life.
Now, sometimes I walk slower on purpose.
Not all the time. I’m not trying to become a monk.
But enough to feel like I’m actually in my day, not chasing it.
6. The “messy journaling” habit
I tried journaling the “proper” way once.
You know—neat handwriting, structured thoughts, meaningful reflections.
Lasted two days.
Now? It’s chaos.
I just write whatever’s in my head:
- “I’m tired”
- “Why did I say that in that meeting?”
- “I should drink more water”
- “Pizza sounds good”
No rules. No pressure.
And somehow, dumping all that mental noise onto paper makes my brain quieter.
It’s like telling your thoughts, “Okay, you’ve been heard. Now chill.”
7. The “end-of-day rewind”
Before I sleep (or scroll until I accidentally fall asleep), I try to think of:
- One thing that went well
- One moment I actually noticed
It could be tiny.
Like:
“That chai I had? Perfect.”
“That random joke someone made? Still funny.”
Nothing life-changing. Just… real moments.
Because otherwise, the day disappears. Completely.
And I don’t want my life to feel like that—like it’s all happening too fast to even remember.
Random thought (but stay with me)
You know how when you look back at childhood, everything feels slower?
Like summers lasted forever?
It’s not because time was actually slower.
It’s because we were there for it.
Fully.
No constant notifications. No “what’s next, what’s next, what’s next.”
Just… being.
I’m not saying we can go back to that completely (I mean, I still need Google Maps to function as a human).
But these daily mindfulness techniques? They kinda bring a little bit of that feeling back.
Where to sprinkle these into your day
Not all at once. Please don’t try to become a mindfulness superhero overnight.
Try this instead:
- Morning: 3 mindful breaths
- Afternoon: “What am I doing?” pause
- Evening: end-of-day rewind
That’s it.
If you do more? Cool.
If you forget? Also cool.
This isn’t a performance.
Two random links I actually like
- A simple breathing guide I stumbled on once: https://www.headspace.com/mindfulness/breathing-exercises
- This oddly calming YouTube channel with ambient sounds: https://www.youtube.com/@relaxdaily
(No, I don’t use them every day. But when I do? Kinda nice.)
Final-ish thought (not really a conclusion, just… yeah)
I still lose focus. I still open my phone for “one minute” and come back 25 minutes later wondering what happened.
But these little habits?
They slow things down.
Not in a dramatic, life-changing, movie-montage way.
Just… enough.
Enough to notice your coffee before it gets cold.
Enough to feel like your life isn’t just rushing past you while you’re busy thinking about something else.
And honestly?
That’s kinda everything.
