Using mindfulness for PTSD may be a good way of coping. Mindfulness has been around for ages. However, mental health professionals are beginning to recognize that mindfulness can have
many benefits for people suffering from difficulties such as anxiety and depression.
In a nutshell, mindfulness is about being completely in-touch with the present moment. So often
in our lives, we are stuck in our heads, caught up in the anxiety and worries of daily life. This exercise will introduce you to mindfulness and may be helpful getting you "out of your head" and in touch with the present moment.
Here's How:
1. Find
a comfortable position either lying on your back or sitting.
2. Close
your eyes.
3. Focus
your attention on your breathing. Simply pay attention to what it feels like in your body to slowly breathe in and out.
4. Now
bring your attention to your belly. Feel your belly rise and expand everytime you breathe in. Feel your belly fall everytime
you breathe out.
5. Continue
to focus your attention on the full experience of breathing. Immerse yourself completely in this experience. Imagine you are "riding the waves" of your own breathing.
6. Anytime
that you notice your mind has wandered away from your breath (it likely will and this is completely
normal!), simply notice what it was that took your attention away and then gently bring your attention back to the present
moment - your breathing.
7. Continue
as long as you would like!
Tips:
1. Make this a habit.
Practice this exercise at least once a day.
2. At first, it may
be important to practice this exercise at times when you are not overly stressed-out or anxious. When you were first learning
to drive a car, you likely didn't start out on the highway during a thunderstorm. The same goes for mindfulness.
3. Remember,
it is normal for your mind to wander during this exercise. That's what it does. Don't get
discouraged. Instead, at times like this, it may be useful to think of mindfulness in this way: If your mind wanders
away from the breath a thousand times, mindfulness is about bringing your attention back to the present moment a thousand
and one times.