Mindfulness of sounds can be a wonderful
skill to practice when it comes to coping with your PTSD symptoms. People with PTSD
may sometimes feel distracted by their thoughts and feelings. As a result, they may find that they have a hard time focusing
attention on what matters most in their life, such as relationships with family and friends or other activities that they
used to enjoy.
This mindfulness exercise, mindfulness of sounds, may help you get in touch with your present moment environment, provide you with some distance from unpleasant thoughts, as well as improve
non-judgmental observation.
Here's How:
1. Find
a comfortable position either lying on you back or sitting. If you are sitting down, make sure that you keep your back straight
and release the tension in your shoulders (let them drop).
2. Close
your eyes.
3. Begin by focusing your attention on your breathing. Simply
pay attention to what it feels like in your body to slowly breathe in and out. Spend a few minutes focusing your attention
on the full experience of breathing. Immerse yourself completely in this experience. Imagine you are "riding the waves" of
your own breathing.
4. Once you have spent
some time focusing on your breathing, shift your awareness to your ears. Then, allow this awareness to expand from your ears
and become aware of and open to all the sounds in your environment.
5. Practice simply
being open to all sounds where ever they arise. Do not go searching for sounds or holding on to the experience of certain
sounds. Instead, just practice having an expansive awareness of all the sounds around you -- sounds that are close, sounds
that are far away, sounds that are soft, and sounds that are loud.
6. Practice connecting
with the sounds. Notice if you are labeling the sounds that you hear (for example, the "tick-tock" I hear is from the clock
on my wall). If you are labeling the sounds you hear, recognize this and then recommit to connecting with the experience of
hearing and the quality of the sound (for example, how loud it is or how long it lasts).
7. Anytime that you
notice that you are getting distracted by a thought (this is completely normal), notice what took you away from the present
moment and bring your attention back to the sounds in your environment.
8. After a few minutes,
shift your attention back to your breathing. When you are ready, open your eyes.