Evening Routine

Evening Recharge

A short sequence to help you transition from the momentum of the day into a quieter evening state. No preparation required — only a few minutes of gentle attention.

Warm evening tones with soft circular shapes suggesting calm and rest
Let the soft tones guide your attention inward.

What this routine offers

Evening Recharge is designed for the space between finishing your day and settling into rest. It does not aim to induce sleep, treat restlessness, or address any health condition. Instead, it offers a gradual softening — a bridge between doing and being.

The practice takes approximately five to eight minutes. You may extend or shorten any step based on how you feel in the moment.

The sequence

Move through these steps at a pace that feels natural. There is no correct duration for any single phase.

Step 01

Ground and arrive

Sit or lie in a comfortable position. Feel the support beneath you. Notice three points of contact — perhaps your feet, your seat, and your hands. Allow your breath to find its own rhythm without changing it.

Step 02

Release the day

Without analysing, let the events of the day pass through your awareness like clouds. No need to review or resolve anything. Simply acknowledge that the active part of the day is complete.

Step 03

Soften the body

Starting from your shoulders, invite a gentle release of tension. Move attention slowly downward — jaw, chest, abdomen, legs. If tension remains, that is perfectly fine. Awareness itself is enough.

Step 04

Settle into quiet

Rest in stillness for a few breaths. Notice the quality of quiet around you and within you. When you feel ready, carry this softness into whatever comes next — reading, conversation, or rest.

Tips for a gentle practice

Dim the lights if possible. Put devices on silent. You do not need silence — ambient sounds are welcome. The goal is not perfection but presence.

If your mind wanders, gently return to the sensation of your breath or the feeling of support beneath you. Wandering is part of the process, not a mistake.

Try Midday Pause