How to Bring Inner Peace Into Your Life: 13 Things You Can Start Doing Today
“The simplification of life is one of the steps to inner peace. A
persistent simplification will create an inner and outer well-being that
places harmony in one’s life.”
“Peace is the result of retraining your mind to process life as it is, rather than as you think it should be.”
The daily life can be busy, hectic and at times overwhelming.
It may sometimes feel like bringing just a little more inner peace and calmness into your life is a hopeless wish.
But it doesn’t have to be that way. Small and smart changes can over time make a big difference.
13 Tips for finding more peace and calmness in everyday life.
1. Set limits. If your life is overfilled you may need
to set some limits. So stop doing some of the least important things,
the things that honestly don’t matter that much. Set a limit for how
many times you will check inboxes, Instagram, Twitter etc. per day. And
say no if you really don’t have the time.
2. Find a relaxation technique that works for you. I
like belly breathing and working out to release tensions and recharge
during the day. What works for you? Long walks, music, yoga, meditation
or going for a swim? Find out and do that.
3. Don’t make mountains out of molehills. This can
create a lot of unnecessary stress. When facing what looks like a
mountain ask yourself questions like: Does someone on the planet have it
worse than me right now? Will this matter in 5 years? These questions
help you to zoom out and realize that things may not be that bad and
that you can handle them.
4. Slow down. Your emotions work backwards too. If you
slow down while walking, moving your body or talking you can often
start to feel less stressed (compared to if you move/talk fast). Slowing
down to decrease stress goes for many other things you do in everyday
life too like riding your bicycle, working at your desk and eating.
5. Unclutter your world, unclutter your mind. Just
take 3 minutes to declutter your workspace or the room you’re in. A
uncluttered, simplified and ordered space around you brings clarity and
order to the mind. So don’t stop there. Declutter, simplify and organize
your home and life too to live in a more relaxing environment.
6. Use a minimalistic workspace. My work space is just
a laptop on a wooden desk. I use a comfy chair and there is room for my
glass of water beside the computer. That’s it. There are no
distractions here. Just me, the computer and the water. This brings
peace and makes it easier to focus during my working hours.
7. Be 10 minutes early. It’s a small habit but it has
transformed much of my travel time during the year from a slightly or
very stressful time to periods of relaxation and recharging.
8. Ask instead of guessing. Reading minds is pretty
much impossible. But still we often try it and create anxiety,
uncertainty and misguided conclusions for ourselves. So ask and
communicate instead. It may sometimes be a bit hard at first but it can
save you and the people around you so much trouble in the long run.
9. Escape for a while. Read a novel, watch your favorite TV-show or a movie. It’s simple but it works well to just release pressure and relax.
10. Solve a problem that is weighing down on you. Don’t
procrastinate anymore. Solve your problem and release it and all the
underlying stress and tension that it is creating in your life. You
probably already know what to do, you are just not doing it yet. But the
longer you wait the worse the tension inside becomes. So get up from
your chair and get started on doing it for just 1-3 minutes right now.
11. Disconnect over the weekend. Leave your work – and
work phone – where it belongs. Disconnect or at least limit your
internet activity and the checking of your smart phone over the weekend.
And spend more of your Saturdays and Sundays with an undivided
attention on your family, friends, hobby or maybe being out in nature.
12. Breathe. When stressed, lost in a problem or the
past or future in your mind breathe with your belly for two minutes and
just focus on the air going in and out. This will calm your body down
and bring your mind back into the present moment again.
13. Remember: There’s a day tomorrow too. Sometimes you
have a bad day. Or life interferes with your plans for the day. And so
you don’t get what you had planned or hoped for done. The best way to
handle such a situation is – in my experience – simply to kindly tell
yourself that there’s a day tomorrow too and that you can get it done
then. Beating yourself up is on the other hand not a smart or helpful
strategy.
source: www.positivityblog.com
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