Stillness

Stillness support regulation by reducing unnecessary activity and improving awareness of internal state.

Stillness

Stillness is a way of reducing unnecessary movement and noise so you can observe more clearly and respond more intentionally.

It can help create space between activation and action.

Stillness does not require being perfectly still.

It means settling enough to notice what is happening without immediately reacting, fixing, or fleeing.

Stillness can help:

It is especially useful when the system is busy, scattered, emotionally noisy, or overcommitted.

Start Simple

Stillness does not have to begin with long sitting periods.

It can start with:

Small periods of stillness can build tolerance and awareness over time.

Stillness as a Regulation Option

Stillness is often helpful when:

Stillness can help you reduce reactivity without shutting down.

Meditation

Meditation is one structured way to practice stillness.

It can help strengthen attention, increase awareness of thoughts and body signals, and build more space between experience and reaction.

Meditation does not need to be long, perfect, or overly formal to be useful.

That is probably the cleanest compromise.

Common Patterns

Under pressure:

Stillness can interrupt these patterns.

Important to remember

Stillness is not the same as passivity.

It does not mean doing nothing forever or forcing yourself into perfect calm.

It means creating enough pause and steadiness to see more clearly and choose the next move with better control.

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