17 Min.

Moving Meditation: Guided Practice for Slowing Down Moved To Meditate Podcast

    • Spiritualität

This episode of the podcast is a gentle moving meditation, exploring what it feels like to slow down. We’ll be playing with pace as we do two very simple motions, observing the sensations in the body, and how movement can often influence our mental activity and nervous system state.
The meditation itself starts at 3:10, after a brief intro.
As we practice this meditation, you will check in with yourself in the present moment - noticing states like tension or ease, mental busy-ness or calm, feeling rushed or steady. We’ll be practicing these mindful observations in a dynamic way, while moving rather than sitting still. 
After taking the time to practice physically slowing down, you may find that you feel more balanced and present. Being mindful of our speed in movement can help us shift out of auto-pilot, settle the nervous system, and break the momentum of a bustling daily life. 
This meditation can be done either standing or seated in a chair. You can have your eyes open or close them, but if you’re standing, you may find that keeping them open (with a soft gaze) helps your balance. 
The movement suggestions are deliberately simple, gentle, and accessible so that you can drop into a meditative experience more easily. In this practice, it is much less important to get the movement "right" than to move in a way that facilitates an experience of mindfulness and curiosity.
I hope you will enjoy this moving meditation, and that it will encourage a playful awareness of your pace as you move through the rest of your day!
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For more links and resources mentioned in this episode, find the show notes at movedtomeditate.yoga/podcast.
And, you can sign up for your "Library Card" to access this month's FREE practices in the Moved To Meditate Class Library!
Feel free to reach out through my website with any episode requests, topics you'd like to hear about, or guest interview suggestions. You can also connect with me on Instagram or Threads at @addie_movedtomeditate (for mindfulness, movement, pictures of Pacific Northwest nature, crocheting projects, and my adorable kitty, Mustache).
 

This episode of the podcast is a gentle moving meditation, exploring what it feels like to slow down. We’ll be playing with pace as we do two very simple motions, observing the sensations in the body, and how movement can often influence our mental activity and nervous system state.
The meditation itself starts at 3:10, after a brief intro.
As we practice this meditation, you will check in with yourself in the present moment - noticing states like tension or ease, mental busy-ness or calm, feeling rushed or steady. We’ll be practicing these mindful observations in a dynamic way, while moving rather than sitting still. 
After taking the time to practice physically slowing down, you may find that you feel more balanced and present. Being mindful of our speed in movement can help us shift out of auto-pilot, settle the nervous system, and break the momentum of a bustling daily life. 
This meditation can be done either standing or seated in a chair. You can have your eyes open or close them, but if you’re standing, you may find that keeping them open (with a soft gaze) helps your balance. 
The movement suggestions are deliberately simple, gentle, and accessible so that you can drop into a meditative experience more easily. In this practice, it is much less important to get the movement "right" than to move in a way that facilitates an experience of mindfulness and curiosity.
I hope you will enjoy this moving meditation, and that it will encourage a playful awareness of your pace as you move through the rest of your day!
-----
For more links and resources mentioned in this episode, find the show notes at movedtomeditate.yoga/podcast.
And, you can sign up for your "Library Card" to access this month's FREE practices in the Moved To Meditate Class Library!
Feel free to reach out through my website with any episode requests, topics you'd like to hear about, or guest interview suggestions. You can also connect with me on Instagram or Threads at @addie_movedtomeditate (for mindfulness, movement, pictures of Pacific Northwest nature, crocheting projects, and my adorable kitty, Mustache).
 

17 Min.