how I went from irritable and so tired to “hey, I feel so much better” 

Part 1: Add meditation to your stress management routine to balance your nervous system & start feeling better

My kids say I look like I’m asleep when I meditate. Don’t be fooled! That’s some deep rest happening here. I usually sit to meditate, but sometimes a nice long session laying down can be very healing.


I’m just going to come out and say it, meditation is amazing. I know, I know, you’re thinking, “ugh Sarah, give me something new! Something that I can actually do to feel better. I’m not a person who can meditate, and does it even really help that much anyway?”

The simple answer is yes, meditation does help that much. And yes, even you can do it, the person who can’t stop the thoughts from running through their mind when trying to sit still.

Stopping your thoughts or "quieting your mind” is not necessary to do meditation “the right way” and is missing the point. I don’t know who is running around saying you have to quiet your mind, but they need to stop. This message is deterring people from giving meditation a solid try.

Meditation is an awareness practice, and the point is to begin noticing your thoughts, becoming the watcher of your thoughts. So it’s ok if you have 10,000 thoughts that come through when you sit down for 10 minutes. You don’t actually have to “quiet” them! 

Meditation teaches you how to notice your thoughts but not identify with them. You learn not to label the thoughts as good or bad, but rather thoughts are like clouds just coming in and out across the sky-space of your mind. You learn to let thoughts go… that was huge for me.

I first learned that meditation doesn’t mean stopping your thoughts from Ziva Meditation teacher Emily Fletcher in an interview with Dr Mark Hyman on his podcast, the Doctor’s Farmacy. You can check out their interview here

Something about the way she described meditation sounded approachable and doable. My ears perked up when she said meditation can provide deeper rest than sleep, and I was just so tired that I would try anything.

There was a link to her newsletter in the podcast show notes so I signed up. And I checked out her book “Stress Less, Accomplish More” because the title said everything I needed at the time with all my stress and working with 3 babies at home.

After I read her emails and the book, I did nothing. Ha! I didn’t start meditating or incorporating mindfulness into my day.

But then, a sort of miracle happened when I needed help the most. 

The Miracle

It was during the Pandemic that I really started to suffer with my stress levels. Working as an RN in the hospital was unpredictable and chaotic. My nervous system was constantly triggered into fight or flight. But I didn’t really find reprieve at home either. 

Virtual school was just not working for my kids. My oldest son in particular struggled with having to sit at the computer (he was in 2nd grade) and would have daily physical tantrums. It was exhausting.

I think the combination of fight or flight triggering events at work and at home led me down the path to what I call my pit of despair. And I was desperate to climb out of that pit!

That’s when I received an email from Emily Fletcher’s Ziva Meditation saying they were offering their in-depth meditation course for free to all first responders and medical providers as their way to support workers during the stress of caring for people with Covid19.

The course is usually hundreds of dollars, and I can’t believe I actually signed up because I had never taken an online course before. 

That’s the miracle: that Ziva offered their course, that I actually saw the email and signed up, and that I followed through and took action, as tired as I was. I watched the modules and did the daily practices. 

And you know what, I got relief and started climbing my way out of the pit of despair. It didn’t happen overnight, but with daily practice my body was able to spend some time in the parasympathetic resting state, to help balance out the time I spent in the triggered and stressed state.

I felt less overwhelmed and started feeling this pause when my kids were stressing me out that I could choose not to yell at them. That was new. 

I didn’t feel as much anxiety walking into work after a short meditation session in my car.

Starting my day with meditation changed everything for me.

When I stop to reflect back on those years when I was suffering so deeply, I get a bit misty and think that it’s not hyperbole to say it really is a sort of miracle. Many people and events and decisions lined up to help me feel better, and I am just so grateful that I was open to giving something new a chance. *

How to Start Your Meditation Practice

I happened to hear about the benefits of meditation on a podcast, but there are many places you can go to get started on your journey to feeling better through mindfulness practices.

  • Ask your friends and family: who in your life is already meditating or doing some sort of mindfulness practice? What do they recommend? What programs or apps do they use? We are more likely to try something out when it’s recommended by someone we know and trust.

  • Apps: we live in a time with so many free resources at our fingertips. I use Insight Timer for daily guided meditations, but there is also Calm, HeadSpace and Meditopia. Again, ask your friends what they use

    Many of the apps have a free version so try that out first. Try searching for something like “morning meditation” or “meditation for calm”

  • Books: oh, the books! I have to mention books. My favorite resource and way to consume information on a given topic. There are countless books out there on mindfulness and meditation, but here are a few to get you started:

    -Wherever You Go, There You Are by Jon Kabat-Zinn

    -Mindfulness for Beginners: Reclaiming the Present Moment and Your Life by Jon Kabat-Zinn

    -Stress Less, Accomplish More by Emily Fletcher

  • YouTube: I personally don’t use YouTube often for meditations because there are distractions, but I know sometimes people are already on YouTube or enjoy watching the video along with the guided meditation session. And this is a good place to learn the principles of meditation.

-5-Minute Guided Meditation: Morning Energy | SELF I enjoy Manoj Dias on Insight Timer but he is on YouTube as well

-This 1 minute video is super helpful to explain the first place we often start in meditation, our breath.

  • just try it: sit down somewhere quiet, close your eyes and begin noticing the sounds around you. Notice your breath coming in and out, feel the cool air on your nose. Just keep noticing your breath coming in and slowly out. When a thought inevitably comes in, no worries. Notice the thought, let it go, and refocus on your breath. That’s it! Start off watching your breath for 2 minutes, then 3 minutes, and then 5. Each time your attention wanders, take your attention back to your breath. If you brain wanders 100 times, you bring your attention back to breath 101 times.

What do you think? Pick one thing to try today. That’s how you’re going to start feeling better. Let me know how it goes.


*my climb out of the pit of despair included a few different factors that I write about in different posts. I incorporated many new lifestyle habits, but I also talked with my loved ones, friends, fellow nurses and a therapist. We aren’t meant to go on our health and life journeys alone, lean into your connections. This post is not medical advice. Please contact your physician and/or a mental health provider for specific recommendations for you.

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