“You are not here to become something. You already are.”
Anxiety is clever. It doesn’t shout. It creeps.
A sensation in your chest, a racing thought, a sudden wave of 'what if.' And before you realize it, you’re no longer here. You’re five steps ahead, rehearsing disaster.
But the truth — the kind that doesn’t make headlines — is this:
*Right now, you are safe.*
Not forever. Not for always. Just here. Just now.
The nervous system doesn’t speak English. It listens to rhythm. To breath. To the way you treat yourself in the quiet. And in this quiet, you can speak clearly: 'We are not in danger. You can rest now.'
You don’t need to feel calm to be safe. You don’t need to fix everything to soften your breath.
Start small. Start here. The present moment has never once asked you to be anything but alive.
Sit or lie down in a quiet space. Place one hand on your chest, the other on your belly. Inhale slowly to a count of four, hold for four, exhale for six. Repeat for five rounds. Let your body feel your breath.
Choose a place you pass often — a mirror, a doorway, a phone lock screen. Each time you see it today, pause and say quietly to yourself: 'Right now, I am safe.'
Maya V. “I used to think I had to 'overcome' anxiety to live normally. But this one practice — just reminding myself I’m safe — has softened everything. I’m learning to stay.”
Your safety is not in the future. It is in your presence.