A guided movement program
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I used to think exercise meant pushing harder. This taught me that the bravest thing I could do was slow down.

Sarah

34 · practicing 11 weeks

Movement that meets you mid-spiral.

Slow, deliberate exercises paired with breathwork sequences — designed for the 2 a.m. chest-tighteners, the meeting-before-the-meeting pacers.

Start your anxiety audit
Personal Anxiety Audit

Answer honestly. No one is watching.

These aren't diagnostic questions. They're the kind you ask yourself at 2 a.m. but never say out loud. Toggle yes or no for each one.

physical

Do you hold tension in your jaw right now?

sleep

Did shallow breathing wake you up this week?

physical

Are your shoulders closer to your ears than usual?

social

Does your stomach tighten before ordinary conversations?

mental

Does resting feel like something you have to earn?

physical

Do you find yourself gripping the steering wheel, phone, or coffee cup harder than necessary?

sleep

Does anxiety arrive before your alarm does?

emotional

Have you smiled through something this week that deserved a different response?

5 Exercise Modules

Each one targets a specific anxiety pathway.

Check the ones that resonate. At the bottom, you'll download exactly what you selected — nothing more.

01
Jaw tensionShallow breathingRacing thoughts

Diaphragmatic Reset

Why it works

Slow diaphragmatic breathing directly activates the vagus nerve — the brake pedal of your nervous system. Within 90 seconds, heart rate variability improves and the prefrontal cortex regains control from the amygdala.

Lie on your back or sit upright. Place one hand on your chest, one on your belly. Breathe so only the lower hand rises. Inhale 4 counts, hold 2, exhale 6. Repeat for 5 minutes.

5 min

breathe

inhale 4·hold 2·exhale 6
02
Shoulder tensionHeld posturePhysical anxiety storage

Shoulder & Neck Release

Why it works

The trapezius muscle chronically contracts during psychological stress. Releasing it sends proprioceptive signals that reduce cortisol production and tell the brain the threat has passed — even when it hasn't.

Sit in a chair. Drop your right ear toward your right shoulder. Breathe into the left side of your neck for 5 breaths. Slowly roll your chin to your chest, then to the left. Pause where you feel resistance.

4 min
Person gently tilting head to one side in a quiet, softly lit room, eyes closed
4 min
03
DissociationPanic onsetDisconnection from body

Floor-to-Standing Grounding

Why it works

Changing your relationship to gravity — moving from floor to standing deliberately — interrupts the freeze response by engaging the vestibular system. It re-anchors your nervous system to the present moment.

Sit cross-legged on the floor. Place your palms flat on the ground beside you. Feel the pressure. Breathe. Slowly rise to kneeling, then standing. Do this 5 times, narrating each position aloud if helpful.

6 min
Person sitting cross-legged on a wooden floor with hands pressed flat, eyes open and calm
6 min
04
Jaw clenchingTMJ tensionFacial holding patterns

Jaw & Face Softening

Why it works

The jaw is the body's primary tension reservoir. The masseter muscle connects directly to the trigeminal nerve, which modulates stress arousal. Releasing it signals safety to the brainstem faster than most other interventions.

Open your mouth wide and yawn — real or performed. Let your jaw hang. Place two fingers on your masseter (the muscle in front of your ears). Breathe in for 4 counts, and on the exhale let your jaw drop heavier.

3 min

breathe

inhale 4·hold 2·exhale 6
05
RuminationLooping thoughtsPost-meeting anxiety

Bilateral Walking Sequence

Why it works

Bilateral movement — alternating left-right body activation — mimics the eye movements used in EMDR therapy. It processes stuck emotional material by engaging both brain hemispheres simultaneously, reducing rumination within minutes.

Walk slowly, exaggerating the arm swing. Left arm forward with right leg. Count each step. At 10, pause for one full breath. Resume. The counting interrupts the thought loop; the movement processes what the counting can't reach.

8 min
Person walking slowly through a quiet park path with arms swinging naturally, dappled light
8 min
From the community

People who found their exhale.

No before/after photos. No transformation arcs. Just honest accounts from people who showed up on hard days.

Jaw & Face Softening

I did the jaw release in my car before a board presentation. I walked in and my voice wasn't shaking for the first time in three years.

Marcus, 41

practicing 6 weeks

Anxiety Audit

The audit was the first time I'd ever seen my anxiety written down in front of me without it feeling like a diagnosis. It just felt honest.

Priya, 29

practicing 14 weeks

Bilateral Walking

I'm a night-shift nurse. I used to come home wired at 3am and lie there for hours. The bilateral walk is the only thing that actually transitions me.

Danielle, 37

practicing 9 weeks

Primary Path

Download My Personal Routine

Every exercise you checked during your scroll becomes a page in your PDF — with instructions, timing, and the neurological reason it works. No email required.

Your routine includes

  • Step-by-step instructions for each exercise
  • Neurological explanation (plain language)
  • Suggested daily timing
  • A 4-week progression guide
7-Day Program

Start the 7-Day Calm Reset

A guided video series delivered to your inbox — one session per day, 12 minutes each. Designed to systematically reduce baseline anxiety over one week.

Day 1Body scan & baseline breathwork
Day 3Movement for the jaw & shoulders
Day 5Bilateral walking sequence
Day 7Integration & your personal protocol

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You've already done the hard part — you showed up and answered honestly.