# Meditation Sit tall with the legs crossed, rest the hands on the knees, and follow the breath. A timed stillness practice that lowers stress, settles the nervous system, and closes a session — or a day — with focus. - **Category:** Mindfulness - **Type:** Seated meditation (timed hold) - **Targets:** Breath, focus, posture - **Prescription:** Sit 5–10 min, attention on the breath, returning to it whenever the mind wanders - **Defaults:** 1 × 300 s ## Setup Sit on the floor (or a cushion) with the legs crossed — lotus, half-lotus, or a simple cross, whatever the hips allow. Stack the spine tall, rest the hands on the knees, and soften the gaze or close the eyes. ## Execution 1. Lengthen up through the crown of the head, letting the shoulders drop. 2. Breathe slowly through the nose — a long inhale, a longer exhale. 3. Rest the attention on the breath moving in and out. 4. When the mind wanders, notice it without judgment and return to the breath. ## Cues - Sit on the front edge of a cushion to tilt the pelvis and free the spine. - Let the breath deepen on its own — observe it rather than forcing it. - Keep the face, jaw, and hands soft; effort lives only in the tall spine. ## Common Mistakes - Slumping through the lower back as the sit goes on. - Chasing every thought instead of letting it pass. - Straining into a full lotus the hips aren't ready for — a simple cross works. ## Progression A few minutes seated comfortably → longer sits with a steady tall spine → half-lotus or full lotus as hip mobility allows.