8 Ways to Return to the Present Moment

As humans we tend to spend a lot of time in the past or the future.

We spend much time thinking about what was and what could have been. And we spend much time projecting into the future and wondering about what may happen.

This way of thinking is indeed a great way to make much of your life a lot more miserable and limited than necessary.

The key to solving this problem is of course to live as much as you can in the only moment that you ever really live in and control.

This moment right now.

The moment that is all there ever was and – probably :) – will be.

There are more advantages to being in the moment besides being able to decrease mindmade suffering. Some of those advantages are:

  • Clarity. When you are in the moment you have a much better focus and things flow naturally out of you. This is very useful in conversations, at work, while writing or while on the tennis court.
  • Calmness. You feel centred, relaxed and whatever you do you do more easily. Since you are not projecting into a possible future or reflecting on previous experiences there is very little fear holding you back or worry stopping you.

Now, that sounds nice and useful.

But how can you step away from the thought loops that whirl back and forth through your memories and fantasies?

How do you actually return to the present moment?

Here are 8 ways. But before we get to them I’d just like to add that this is a skill.

You will slip back into involuntarily thinking about the future/past. But the more time and effort you spend connecting with the moment the easier it gets reconnecting with it. And staying there longer.

1. Focus on what’s right in front of you.

Or around you. Or on you. Use your senses.

Just look at what’s right in front of you right now (besides your laptop/phone and my blog). Listen to the sounds around you. Feel the fabric of your clothes and focus on how they feel.

For the last three days the dark winter seems to have left us here in Sweden. It’s been clear skies and sunshine all the time.

So I have been using the unexpected light and warmth of the sunshine on my skin to reconnect with the moment.

2. Focus on your breathing.

Take a couple of dozen belly breaths and just focus your mind on your inhaling and exhaling. This will align you with the present moment once again.

3. Focus on your inner body.

This is a bit similar to focusing on your breathing. In both examples you focus on what’s inside you rather than the outside.

What is the inner body?

Well, I guess you could say it is energy inside of your body. How your body feels from the inside.

A practical way to do this just to focus on your hand. To just put your focus there and feel how the hand feels to you and how the energy is flowing through it.

Yeah, this suggestion may sound a bit weird to the mind. But if you actually try it a few times you’ll probably find that inner energy within your hand.

4. Pick up the vibe from present people.

If you know someone that is more present than most people then you can pick his/her vibe of presence (just like you can pick up positivity or enthusiasm from people).

If you don’t know someone like that I recommend listening to/watching cds/dvds by Eckhart Tolle. His books work too. But cds/dvds are better than books for picking up someone’s vibe since the biggest part of communication is voice tonality and body language.

5. Surrender to the emotion that is already there.

It’s easy to get stuck in a loop of old memories. You may want to move away from them but there is a feeling there that brings them back over and over.

So you need to decrease the power that feeling has over you. And you don’t do it by fighting it. You do it by surrendering to it.

The feeling is a loop within your mind that you are feeding with more energy by resisting it. When you accept the feeling then you stop feeding it and it vanishes.

Here’s how you it:

Say yes to the feeling.

Surrender and let it in. Observe the feeling in your mind and body without labelling or judging it. If you let it in – for me the feeling then often seems to physically locate itself to the middle of my chest – and just observe it for maybe a minute or two the feeling just vanishes.

As you can see, this way is similar to ones above. They are all about observing.

6. See things as for the first time.

This one pretty similar to the first way. But it can be useful when you have a hard time just observing your surroundings.

That’s when you can look at things as for the first time. Imagine it like that, take that role.

Like someone who has never experienced this before. Like a child or someone who has never been here before.

I like this one and I have been doing it from time to time for years (although back then I didn’t really understand why it felts nice when I did it).

Note: These last two ways are certainly not the best ways to reconnect with the moment and I’m not really recommending them. They aren’t that healthy (especially in the long run). But they work to some degree. It’s up to you if you want to try them.

7. Punch your leg.

Try punching your leg. Or pinching your arm. Or have someone else do it.

And focus on that sensation to quickly bring yourself back to the moment.

8. Drink a beer or two.

It’s Friday so I thought I’d include this one.

This is probably the most common way to connect to the moment (at least over the weekend). You may have said or heard that it’s nice to grab a beer or two after work to take the edge off.

What is this edge?

I think it’s the clutter of thoughts that can run around in your mind after a long and busy week at work.

The alcohol quiets down these thoughts (and the decreases the number of thoughts in your mind). And you feel more relaxed.

You don’t think about the past or future as much. You just enjoy your beer and the company. You enjoy the moment.

Drinking a couple of beers – or getting really drunk – can remove the past or future from your mind.

It can add calmness and positive feelings. However, it throws the clarity out the window. :)

So besides the health aspects of drinking, this isn’t exactly an ideal way to be in the present moment. Use it at your own risk.

Or just try out a few of the more healthy and effective techniques.

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About the Author

Henrik Edberg is the creator of the Positivity Blog and has written weekly articles here since 2006. He has a bachelor’s degree in journalism from the University of Gothenburg and has been featured on Lifehacker, HuffPost and Paulo Coelho’s blog. Click here to learn more…

Comments on this entry are closed.

  • I once read a great technique for helping to refocus on the present. It is similar to what you have above. It suggested looking at the common items around you. Observe their color, their texture, stop and think about the details of the items. Be in wonder of the common items by thinking about their complexity, beauty, or what it took to make them. It works for me and I find it very useful.

    Great article! I gave it a review on StumbleUpon. Also, I want to congratulate you on topping over 6000 subscribers. That is an amazing achievement!

  • This topic is great and one that many people completely overlook. Use this in your work, your relationships and in the fun in your life and it WILL make a serious impact.

    Great list of things to pay attention to, thanks for posting this!!!

  • Nice post, Henrik.

    Unfortunately, I can’t try point number 8. It’s Friday evening, but I can’t drink a beer (I’m taking care of my health and liver, especially).

    My way to return to the present moment. I go to a calm place, usually my room. No strong light, maybe ambient music in background.

    First I close my eyes. I work for a while on my breath, trying to make it a little slower and regular. Then I imagine myself in endless space between two glass surfaces. One is in front of me and it separates me from future, another is behind me and separates me from past. Therefore I’m only here and now. I focus on feelings coming from being separated from future and past. My thoughts can pass these glass bariers.

    I slowly open eyes keeping that state of mind. Stay relaxed it present moment as much as you want. You don’t have to care about anything, as there is only now and here.

    Have a nice weekend.

  • Hey, you have a great blog here! I’m definitely going to bookmark you!

  • Thanks so much for the profound wisdom! All the best, Brad

  • Hey… OK, there is many tactics to add to the list, but if I have the master-key, I won’t worry. Here is the master-key from the post:

    “But before we get to them I’d just like to add that this is a skill. You will slip back into involuntarily thinking about the future/past”

    This is a great skill and requires a lot of practice.

    thanks Henrik, and keep up the good work.

  • Somewhat similar to #6, I use a technique I call…really seeing. I will look at a person and thing and try to see as much detail as possible. For instance when you look at a person and block out everything around and behind the person, after a short time you start seeing them in a surreal way. It’s like watching a 3D movie. I would imagine that painters see things this way, with shadows and light.
    Ok, I admit, I like looking at the women more than men! Better shapes, I suppose….

  • Nice article – I stumbled it.

    I think that the one thing that troubles most of us is wanting things right now that we cannot have. As soon as we do that we start drifting out of the moment and into other thoughts of past and present and problems in general.

    Staying focused on the moment is, for me, all about doing things that are ‘possible in the moment’ so consequently managing my desires and expectations is key to staying centered, focused and cheerful.

    This is my take on things:
    http://www.nickpagan.com/blog/27/possible-in-the-moment/

    I’ve no beer in the house :-( but I do have a bottle of wine cooling in the fridge :-) Time for a refreshing moment…

  • Nancy

    That’s hilarious, punch your leg! I’ll try that next time I loose a $5 bill haha.

  • I really like #5: surrender to the emotion that is already there. I spend too much time trying NOT to think about something, when I’m actually just fueling it.

    I’m going to bookmark this page and review at my breaks ;)

    Also, good for you for including alcohol! I think it gets overlooked too much in the health/wellness field. I’m not a big drinker, bet every now and then a nice glass of wine tones me down enough to forget the past and future and just enjoy the present.

    Kacper – great visualization idea… I’m going to try it. Thanks!

  • :)

    try meditation or stretching

  • What a great post, Thanks. I especially love the idea of punching my leg as well as drinking a beer as inspiration in which to return to the present.

  • Love this post! Very practical; I am impressed you were authentic enough to add the last option – it is amazing how drink a beer or two helps.

  • Cristian Muresanu

    Hi,

    I had discovered Eckhart Tolle back in 2005 but at that time, my mind was so oscillating that it was impossible to me to even listen the slow spoken words, apparently not explaining anything. But after a powerful and deep inside confrontation, a kind of limit situation in my life, happenned in february 2006 I had re-discovered the same Eckhart Tolle and this time everything was different. Only few months later when I had watched one of his lectures the impossible became possible.
    Now, my mind was just ready to enter the stillness. Since that time, I kept inside me a peaceful background and silence within, even in the most active moments. Since then and until now, no emotions ever affected me, and the former emotional deceptions just evaporate permanently from me. Negative events cannot tocuh me and positive events are recepted with consciouss joy and happiness.
    I feel happiness and fulfillment almost every moment of the day, as never before, and that is contuously for 2 years until today. Is Tolle teachings helpful ? Yes ! And they are to be achieved by everybody. However, in order to make them permanent, I needed a small amount of mental and biological discipline, so to speak, which means not loosing the vitality created by the endocrine glands and a little breathing excercises in order to achieve a lower rhythm. That’s all

  • I think that #5 is pretty healthy, why add the note? Maybe surrendering to your emotions is not useful for “returning to the moment” so much as enabling you to keep a healthy awareness of yourself, accepting your real feelings rather than ignoring the usefulness that can come of them.

    Also, the process you described of saying yes to your emotions and then letting them go is a technique frequently used for dealing with thoughts that come up during meditation. Works well for a lot of people. Great post!