Arrive Here: A Week of Slowing Down and Coming Home to Yourself

Arrive Here

There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes not from doing too much, but from never quite landing. You move through your morning, your meetings, your meals — but part of you is always somewhere else. Anticipating the next thing. Rehearsing a conversation. Running over what you forgot to do.

This week is an invitation to stop.

Not to stop entirely — but to stop rushing past yourself.

Week one of The Sacred Pause is built around one simple idea: you cannot tend to what you are not present for. Before we can root, we have to arrive. Before we can rise, we have to touch down.


On the Mat This Week

Sessions this week are slow and supported. Long holds. Props welcome — blocks, blankets, bolsters. The practice is not about getting somewhere. It is about feeling where you already are.

The mantra for the week is simple and worth returning to whenever the pace of life tries to pull you forward:

I am already enough, right here.

Let that settle into the body, not just the mind.


Off the Mat: Three Ways to Practice Arriving This Week

The real work of a slow practice happens in ordinary moments. Here are three things to bring into your week.

Pause before you begin anything. Before you open your laptop, before your first sip of coffee, before you start the car — take one full breath. Inhale slowly. Exhale completely. This is not about adding time to your day. It is about claiming the time you already have.

Notice the texture of what is in front of you. At least once a day, put your hands on something — the ground, the bark of a tree, the rim of a cup — and actually feel it. Not mindlessly. Actually feel it. This is how the nervous system learns it is safe to be here.

End the day with a body check-in. Before sleep, lie down and ask: where did I hold tension today? Not to fix it — just to notice. The body keeps a record of everything you moved through. This is a way of saying, I see you. I was here too.


A Thought to Carry

Presence is not a destination you arrive at once and stay. It is something you return to, again and again, like a breath.

This week, every time you find yourself already somewhere else — in tomorrow, in the worry, in the to-do list — let it be a gentle signal to come back. Not with frustration. With the same soft curiosity you would offer a friend.

You do not have to earn your way into this moment. You are already here.


This post is part of The Sacred Pause, a four-week May yoga series exploring presence, pacing, rest, and nurture.


Enjoying this content? My book 52 Weeks of Wisdom & Wellness goes deeper — find it here.

Why Yin Yoga Is Perfect for Winter: Rest, Renewal, and Seasonal Wisdom

Winter is not a season of momentum. It is a season of conservation, reflection, and quiet transformation beneath the surface. In nature, growth slows, energy retreats inward, and rest becomes essential. Yin yoga mirrors this seasonal wisdom, offering a practice that honors stillness rather than resistance.

Unlike more active styles of yoga, yin is slow and deliberate. Poses are held for several minutes and are often supported, allowing the body to soften gradually instead of being pushed. During winter, when energy levels may feel lower and the nervous system more sensitive, this gentle approach becomes deeply nourishing rather than draining.

One of the most profound benefits of yin yoga in winter is its effect on the nervous system. Long, quiet holds encourage the body to shift out of constant alertness and into a state of rest and repair. Breath naturally deepens, muscles release unnecessary effort, and the mind begins to settle. In a season that can feel heavy or overstimulating, yin provides a sense of refuge.

Winter and Yin

Winter is traditionally associated with the Kidney and Bladder meridians, which relate to inner reserves, resilience, and wisdom. Yin yoga supports these energetic pathways by encouraging deep release along the spine, hips, and back body. Rather than expending energy, the practice helps preserve and replenish it, creating a feeling of steadiness and quiet strength.

Emotionally, winter yin offers space for reflection without pressure. This time of year often brings memories, endings, and a natural turning inward. Yin yoga does not rush these experiences or attempt to fix them. Instead, it creates a calm container where emotions can surface, soften, and pass without judgment. Through stillness, we learn to listen rather than react.

Yin and Rest

Yin yoga also reshapes our relationship with rest. In a culture that often treats rest as something to earn, winter yin reframes it as essential and intelligent. Stillness becomes a practice of trust — trusting the body’s timing, trusting the season, and trusting that slowing down is not falling behind.

Practicing yin in winter is an act of alignment. It is a choice to live in rhythm with nature rather than against it. Through support, patience, and quiet awareness, yin yoga honors the unseen work happening within us — the gathering of strength, clarity, and intention that will eventually support new growth when the light returns.

In this way, yin yoga becomes more than a physical practice. It becomes a seasonal ritual, a way of listening deeply, restoring gently, and allowing winter to teach us its quiet wisdom.

5 Gentle Yoga Poses to Reduce Anxiety — With Chair Yoga Options for All Bodies

5 Gentle Yoga Poses to Reduce Anxiety — With Chair Yoga Options for All Bodies

We all experience stress and anxiety—but you don’t have to face it alone.
This new yoga video offers a short but powerful practice featuring 5 calming yoga poses, each designed to soothe your nervous system and quiet your mind.

Whether you’re brand new to yoga or seeking an accessible way to find ease in your day, these poses can help you feel more grounded, supported, and at peace.

What You’ll Practice:

  • Forward Fold – for gentle spinal release
  • Legs Up the Wall – to reduce swelling & calm the nervous system
  • Cat-Cow – to awaken the spine and connect breath to movement
  • Child’s Pose – to settle the body into rest
  • Seated Twist – to release tension and improve circulation

And the best part?
Every pose includes a chair yoga variation, making it perfect for seniors, beginners, or anyone needing extra support.

Plus, keep an eye out for Leo the cat’s peaceful cameo—adding a little joy to your practice ?

Chair Option Here:

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