A practice of remembering who you are
Meditation is often misunderstood as something only for monks, people with lots of time, or those who can sit still without thinking.
But in truth, meditation is a practice of being with yourself, gently and honestly, exactly as you are.
It is a way to slow down, clear the noise, and come back to your inner knowing.
Not by escaping the body, but by softening into it.
Not by silencing your thoughts, but by being present with whatever is alive in the moment.
Meditation can be practised sitting, lying down, or even in movement.
It can be as simple as following your breath or as rich as exploring a guided visualisation or body scan.
My journey with meditation
I discovered meditation not long after I began practising yoga.
At first, it felt unfamiliar and even a little uncomfortable.
But over time, it became one of the most transformative tools I’ve ever known.
Meditation brought me back into my body and into my truth.
It reconnected me with my intuition in a way I didn’t know was possible.
It helped me hear the quiet voice beneath the noise, the one that told me what was really aligned for me.
It empowered me to let go of roles, relationships, and beliefs that were no longer serving me.
Some of the biggest shifts in my life came from this space of stillness and clarity.
Not from force or logic, but from truth.
Even now, meditation is part of my life in quiet, simple ways.
What meditation can bring
Meditation is not about clearing your mind or stopping your thoughts.
It is about learning to be with them, without needing to fix, escape, or control.
It is about connecting to your breath, your body, and your inner landscape and welcoming what is already there.
Practised regularly, meditation can support:
- Inner calm and emotional regulation
- Clarity in decision-making
- Reconnection with intuition and inner guidance
- Reduced stress, anxiety, and overthinking
- Greater body awareness and presence
- Investigating emotional patterns or subconscious beliefs
- A deeper connection with yourself and your truth
It is not about perfection. It is about practice.
It is about creating space to feel, to listen, and to come home.
Forms of meditation
There are many ways to meditate. You do not have to sit still in silence.
If you have found traditional meditation challenging, there are softer, more embodied forms available.
Some examples include:
- Guided meditations using voice, sound, or music
- Body scan meditations for awareness and relaxation
- Visualisations to access intuition, creativity, or healing
- Breath-based meditation for grounding and calm
- Movement meditations like walking or intuitive dance
- Mindfulness practices for observing thoughts, emotions, and sensations
The key is to find a practice that meets you where you are, and to allow it to evolve over time.
Rooted in the body
Meditation becomes even more powerful when it includes the body.
For sensitive or neurodivergent nervous systems, stillness alone can sometimes feel overwhelming.
That is why I often blend meditation with body-based tools like visualisation, breathwork, and touch awareness.
When you include the body, the practice becomes more than stillness.
It becomes a doorway into feeling, healing, and intuition.
A way to be with what is true, without rushing to change it.
A practice of honesty, softness, and self-trust.