Today I want to talk about something personal — why I meditate. Not in the abstract, not the "studies show" version. Just honest, from where I sit after nearly 25 years of doing this work.
I was talking to someone recently who told me she meditates in her car. And I loved that. Someone asked her what she actually does in there and she kind of paused — because it's hard to explain, right? She said something like, "I watch my breath. I sit quietly. I feel the warmth of the sun coming through the window." And that is beautiful. That is presence. That matters.
But here's what I want to dig into today — because presence is the beginning, not the destination.
Most people, when they think about meditation, think about apps. And I want to be clear: apps are fantastic. They're accessible, they're gentle entry points, and they've brought a lot of people to the practice who wouldn't have found it otherwise. But here's the thing — scrolling through a meditation app can start to feel a lot like scrolling through Netflix. You try the sleep one, the anxiety one, the focus one. And you feel a little better in the moment. But nothing really shifts.
Why? Because apps are great at helping you feel calm for twenty minutes. They are not designed to help you figure out what your unconscious patterns are — let alone do anything about them.
And that's the whole game, as far as I'm concerned.
Everything I teach is rooted in four pillars. Breath. Body scan. Mantra. And self-inquiry. These four things, practiced consistently and with intention, don't just quiet your mind during meditation time. Over time, they start to dissolve the wall between meditation and the rest of your life.
That's the real goal. Not a perfect sit every morning. Not a streak on an app. But a life that feels — over time, gradually, honestly — more peaceful. More focused. More engaged. Less reactive.
If you could move through your days like that — moment by moment, actually here, actually present, with a little more space between what happens and how you respond — you would never want to miss a day. Not because you should meditate, but because you'd feel the difference when you don't.
That's why I meditate. And that's what I'm here to teach.
If you want to go deeper, the Yoga Nidra sessions on my Patreon are a good place to start — they work with several of these pillars in one practice. Link is in the show notes.
I'll see you next time. Stay still out there. 🌊