Jay Nesbit is The Pharmacist Wordsmith® and author of Life Well Lived Books©
Most of us are on autopilot more than we realize. Here’s a simple mindfulness practice to help you break the cycle.
Have you ever pressed an elevator button multiple times expecting it to arrive faster? Or checked your phone for messages one minute after the last time you checked? These small, mindless habits are more revealing than they seem — they’re signs that our thoughts are running us, rather than the other way around.
The good news: awareness is the first step to change. That’s the heart of mindfulness — not a mystical ritual, but a practical skill of paying deliberate attention to your thoughts, feelings, and behaviors as they happen.
“Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakens.” — C.G. Jung
When you learn to observe your inner world without judgment, you stop reacting on instinct and start responding with intention. You replace negative thought loops with constructive ones. You manage stress before it manages you. And over time, you build the kind of self-awareness that leads to a more fulfilling life.

Try it now: a 5-minute mindfulness session
Set a timer for 5 minutes. Find a quiet spot, silence your phone, and work through these four steps.
1. Settle in
Take three slow, deep breaths. Notice the sounds, sights, and sensations around you. Let your mind clear.
2. Start with gratitude
Ask yourself: “What are three things I’m grateful for today?” They can be small — good weather, a decent cup of coffee. Write them down.
3. Check in with yourself
Pick one of these questions and sit with it. Write whatever comes up — no judgment, no editing.
What am I feeling right now?
What’s been occupying my thoughts today?
What surprised or frustrated me recently?
What would I do differently next time?
4. Keep it going
Commit to two 5-minute sessions this week. Increase the length gradually. The insights expand over time.
If your mind wanders during the session — totally normal. Jot the stray thought down, then return to your question. The goal isn’t a blank mind; it’s a focused one.
One more technique worth trying: mind sculpture. Before a situation you’re nervous about — a presentation, a difficult conversation — close your eyes and vividly imagine yourself handling it well. Engage all your senses. This mental rehearsal builds genuine confidence over time.
Want to go deeper?
This post is drawn from chapter 3 of my book Rise Above the Rut — a practical guide to breaking free from the patterns holding you back and building a life with more purpose and clarity. The book walks you through a full 3-step process, with mindfulness as the essential foundation.

