Do two quick inhales through the nose—one full, one topping off—then a long, unhurried exhale through the mouth. Repeat for about ten rounds. Carbon dioxide drops, lung sacs reopen, and your body cues relaxation. Keep eyes soft, shoulders heavy, and notice tension release between one class and the next.
Inhale for four, hold for four, exhale for four, hold for four. Trace an imaginary square with your finger against your thigh or notebook cover. After two minutes, heart rate steadies, thinking clears, and the transition feels intentional. If crowded, count silently and smile gently to yourself.
Hold keys, a coin, or a zipper pull, and explore every edge, ridge, and temperature change with deliberate curiosity. Name three textures and two temperatures silently. This non-disruptive tactile focus occupies the mind constructively, lowers anxiety, and reminds you that certainty exists in contact with simple, ordinary objects.
Close your eyes if it is appropriate, or simply soften your gaze. Identify the farthest sound, then the nearest, then something rhythmic like footsteps or HVAC. Let sounds arrive and pass without evaluation. You are practicing attention flexibility, building resilience for the unpredictable moments classes inevitably deliver.
Decide that every time a bell rings or a chair squeaks under you, you will do one breath pattern or a quick sensory scan. Cues already exist; you simply attach intention. This frictionless design cuts decision fatigue and makes resets automatic, even when your day gets noisy.
Draw seven tiny circles in your planner for the week and shade one each time you practice. Celebrate streaks without perfectionism. Consider inviting friends to share their circles by message. Light accountability multiplies consistency, and your brain begins to expect relief when the next transition arrives.
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