Guided Meditations
The guided meditations here can be practiced in sequence or on their own. Throughout, you'll find alternatives: different anchors, different postures, invitations rather than instructions. This is intentional. The goal isn't to follow a guided meditation correctly. It's to develop your own relationship with your inner life. If any practice, particularly those that involve awareness of the body and working with difficulties, becomes more activating than settling, trust your inner wisdom to step away until a time when you feel more resourced.
Ways to Begin
Places to Deepen
Working with Difficulties
Common Questions
-
You’re in the right place. Start with something easy, like 5 minutes of meditation each day. I have some beginner-friendly recorded meditations that help you establish a practice using a focus such as your breath or sound.
-
Whatever we practice becomes habit, and this is true of our minds. Meditation can help reduce stress, improve focus, open your heart, support emotional resilience, create more space between you and your thoughts, and foster better personal relationships, among many other benefits. There are thousands of scientific papers on this topic, but I encourage you to come and see for yourself if this practice might serve you.
-
Our minds are designed to generate thoughts. We can’t get rid of them. The goal of meditation isn’t to stop thinking—it’s to notice your thoughts without getting pulled into them. It helps us understand that we are not our thoughts and that they aren’t all true, which is a kind of inner freedom.
-
I’m not a therapist and very often recommend that mindfulness practitioners also work with a qualified mental health professional. Meditation can be a powerful addition to therapy.