What Grounding Really Means: Supporting the Body, Breath and Nervous System
Originally published October 2023. Updated May 2026 with expanded insights into grounding, body awareness and nervous system support.
There is something quietly beautiful about rain falling on leaves.
Perhaps you have noticed it too.
The sound is gentle but steady. It washes dust from branches and nourishes what has become dry. It does not rush or force anything. It simply arrives and allows nature to do what it already knows how to do.
I often think we are not so different.
Life has a way of collecting within us. Responsibilities, grief, uncertainty, endless notifications, busy schedules, difficult conversations, and the emotions we quietly carry can slowly gather like leaves caught in a stream. We may not even notice the weight until one day we find ourselves feeling overwhelmed, disconnected, exhausted, or unable to settle our minds.
People often say:
“I need to feel grounded.”
But what does that actually mean?
Grounding is often misunderstood as simply standing barefoot outside or imagining roots growing into the earth. While these can be beautiful practices, grounding is much deeper than that.
Grounding is the process of reconnecting with yourself.
It is returning attention back to your body, your breath, your senses, and the present moment.
Grounding is not about forcing yourself to feel calm.
It is about remembering where you are.
It is about coming home to yourself.

When Life Feels Loud
There are times in life when the world seems to become louder than usual. News arrives faster than we can process it. Responsibilities accumulate. Family needs us. Work demands attention. Grief appears unexpectedly. Financial worries creep in quietly. We carry concerns for our children, grandchildren, relationships, health, and sometimes for the state of the world itself. We continue moving forward because that is what we do, often not realizing how much we are carrying until our body begins to speak for us.
Sometimes the body speaks softly at first. We notice fatigue that sleep does not seem to touch. Perhaps our shoulders remain tense even while sitting quietly. Thoughts become more difficult to organize. Patience becomes shorter. We may feel emotionally sensitive or strangely disconnected from ourselves and from the people around us. For some individuals, it may feel as though they are present physically but absent internally — moving through life while a part of them feels left behind somewhere.
In my work over the years, I have seen people sit down and say things like, “I do not know why I feel this way. Nothing terrible has happened.” Yet often there does not need to be one major event. Sometimes it is simply the accumulation of many small moments. Like rain filling a bucket one drop at a time, stress can gather quietly until one day the nervous system begins signaling that it needs rest, awareness, and attention.
This does not mean something is wrong with you. It does not mean you are weak, failing, or somehow incapable of handling life. The nervous system was designed to protect us. It constantly gathers information through our experiences, our surroundings, and our perceptions of safety. At times it can become overprotective, remaining alert even after the original stress has passed.
Grounding Is Not About Perfection
Many individuals approach grounding in the same way they approach many things in life: another task to complete, another expectation to meet, another thing to get right.
“I should meditate more.”
“I should be calmer than this.”
“Why can’t I stop thinking?”
I hear these concerns often, and there can be so much self-judgment hidden beneath them. Somewhere along the way many of us learned that being calm means having no thoughts, no worries, and no emotional reactions. Yet being human was never meant to look like that.
Grounding is not about becoming perfectly peaceful or reaching some ideal state where stress disappears completely. The mind was created to think. Emotions were created to move through us. Our bodies respond to life because they are alive and paying attention.
Grounding is not asking us to stop being human. It is simply inviting us to return to ourselves when we have wandered too far into fear, worry, overwhelm, or the endless noise around us.
Sometimes grounding is not a dramatic experience at all. Sometimes it is a small internal shift. A breath that feels deeper than the one before. A moment of noticing sunlight through a window. The sound of rain resting on leaves. The warmth of holding a cup of tea in your hands.
Small moments can become important moments.
Gentle Ways to Reconnect
Feel Your Feet
Pause and bring awareness into your feet.
Feel where they meet the floor. Notice pressure, temperature, texture, or sensation.
You are not trying to change anything.
Simply notice.
Follow Your Breath
Take a slow breath in.
Pause gently.
Release slowly.
Allow your breathing to find its own rhythm rather than forcing it into a pattern.
Breath can become a simple reminder that you are here, in this moment.
Notice Your Surroundings
Pause and gently observe:
Five things you see.
Four things you can touch.
Three things you hear.
Two things you smell.
One thing you taste.
Simple sensory awareness practices can gently bring attention away from racing thoughts and back into the present moment.
Spend Time with Nature
Walk beneath trees.
Listen to birds.
Feel rain on your skin.
Watch leaves moving in the wind.
Nature has a quiet way of slowing us down. Not because it asks anything of us, but because it reminds us that not everything has to happen immediately.
Sometimes nature simply invites us to breathe again.
Place Your Awareness on Your Heart
Close your eyes and bring gentle awareness toward your heart space.
Not the physical heart alone, but the place within you that knows compassion, kindness, and understanding.
Ask yourself:
“What do I need right now?”
Then simply listen.
You do not need to force an answer.
How Reiki and Hypnotherapy May Support Grounding
Through Reiki, Integrative Chakra Therapy®, and Hypnotherapy, I have often witnessed something difficult to measure with words. People frequently arrive feeling exhausted, disconnected, or emotionally heavy. Many describe feeling as though they are living entirely in their thoughts while feeling separated from their bodies, their emotions, or even from themselves.
Sometimes what appears to be stress on the surface is really a longing for reconnection.
While these approaches are not intended to diagnose, treat, or replace medical care, many individuals describe experiencing a greater sense of relaxation, awareness, and connection during and following sessions. When the body begins to soften and the mind becomes quieter, people often notice something they had not realized was missing: themselves.
Healing is not always about fixing what is broken.
Sometimes healing begins when we stop trying to force ourselves to become something different and instead gently return to what has always been present beneath the noise.
At Gaia Natural Therapies, I work with individuals in Nanaimo and Nanoose Bay who are navigating stress, overwhelm, grief, emotional fatigue, and a desire to reconnect with themselves more deeply. Through Reiki, Integrative Chakra Therapy®, and Hypnotherapy, my approach is centered on creating a grounded and supportive space where individuals can reconnect with body awareness, inner balance, and self-understanding.
Pause and Reflect
Take a slow breath.
Notice where you are sitting.
Notice what you hear.
Notice what your body is asking for today.
Perhaps it is rest.
Perhaps it is movement.
Perhaps it is simply permission to be exactly where you are.
And like rain falling softly on leaves, perhaps not everything needs to be pushed away.
Sometimes what we need most is to let ourselves settle.
A PDF gift: Clearing and Grounding Techniques
Blessings Deirdre


Deirdre Leighton