I Meditated For 10 Days In A Row + What I Realized
One of my first days back from France, I was home alone working away on FemmeHead. I had cooped myself up all day so I decided to go outside on my long board since it was such a nice day out (and we’re creeping ever closer to the awful months of winter).
It was a nice ride, but I remember coming back with this real sense of anxiety and stress in my chest, and I just remember thinking "I need to meditate".
I had heard of an app called Headspace (no this is not a sponsored post, I wish). I decided to download it and give it a go.
Ten minutes, I thought. I can do this.
I felt light years better afterwords. The anxiety had lifted from my chest and and felt a renewed sense of calm. So, I challenged myself to do the 10 free days of meditation in a row.
I mean, honestly, who doesn’t have ten minutes out of their day to spare?
So, I began fitting it into my morning routine.
+ wake up
+ write my morning pages
+ tidy for 15 - 30 minutes
+ meditate for 10
+ make a coffee/tea
+ make my to-do list
+ get started on work
On the morning of the tenth day I was sitting at my computer writing my Monday email for FemmeHead, and I could feel myself being pulled towards the red chair, pulled towards those ten minutes of calm.
Before these ten days I would meditate sporadically, never consistently. I thought I had to set up this sacred space (candles, intense, calm music, cushions, blankets and darkness) before I could begin meditating. And I thought I needed to do it for a long period of time.
As you can probably guess, because of this meditation always seemed like such a time consuming hassle that I rarely did it, which is a shame.
What I’ve learned from these ten days is that I don’t need a sacred, pristine space. I can simply just sit down in the chair or lie down on the couch.
There are no rules, I let my preconceived notions of meditation float out the window.
It counts even if it’s just ten minutes, hell, even just one minute.
I never thought I would like guided meditations. I thought I just had to sit there and keep my mind blank for 20 - 30 minutes, and that would work for me.
At the end of my tenth meditation I went online and subscribed to a year long subscription, realizing that having someone guide me along is what I need at this point in my life, and there’s nothing wrong with that.
I was having a rough day last week, and I found the calm I needed in that moment, in my breath. Yes, in simply just counting my breaths, 1 through 10 and starting over at 1 when I had reached 10.
For at least a year now I’ve been drawn towards meditation, just knowing that it was something that would be really, really good for me. But I could never stick with it. Thankfully, I’ve found my solution for now.
And my biggest take away — there is no right or wrong way to meditate. Let go of your preconceived notions of what it is supposed to do and find what works for you.