7 Mindful Movement Practices for Daily Life

Top mindful movement experts invite us to come home to the body, get curious about what we find there, and let it nourish us from the inside out.

Illustration by Spencer Creelman

A few months ago, my partner and I were moving across town from one apartment to another. A gaggle of wonderful friends had volunteered to help us on moving day. As we carried box after cardboard box down several flights of stairs, I found myself feeling more lighthearted than I had in weeks. The inner static of worrying, planning, and overthinking the move had faded as I shifted my attention toward lifting properly, ascending and descending the steps with care, and physically coordinating with others as we packed up the van. Later I realized that the day’s rather unusual physical activities had reminded me how to tune in to movement in a way I hadn’t done in a long time. My mind and body were finally in harmony, in motion together.

Fortunately, this kind of mind-body awareness is available to us every day, not only “moving day.” As biomechanist Katy Bowman puts it, “Movement is the axis and spine of all human behavior.” It’s part of who we are, and part of how we express who we are. Moving with awareness is a way to embody our intentions, our sense of purpose, and our relationship to those we love and the world around us.

Moving mindfully goes beyond trying to change or control something about our body, as is sometimes the case with exercise. With mindful movement, the practice of being present with the body in motion allows us to attend to—and maybe even enjoy!—the process itself, instead of waiting for the desired results. You can bring that presence while doing a weight-lifting or pilates workout, or strolling with a friend after dinner, or playing soccer, or pushing your child on the swing, or folding laundry. Movement, whether simple or complex, is what life’s made up of. Why not be here for it?

Movement, whether simple or complex, is what life’s made up of. Why not be here for it?

And all of this embodied awareness comes with positive side effects. Contemplative teacher Willa Blythe Baker writes, “Recent studies on interoception (an innate capacity to sense the processes, feelings, and experiences of the interior body, such as your heartbeat, breathing, or hunger) have found a relationship between interoceptive awareness and emotional regulation.” From the butterflies of new love to the heavy ache of grief, we can sense how our emotions are rooted in the body. When we’re able to stay with the curiosity about what our body’s doing and what that feels like in each moment, this in turn improves our ability to navigate our emotions with skill. Becoming more aware and accepting of emotions also creates the possibility, as Zindel Segal describes, of “developing a different relationship to experience, one that is characterized by allowing an experience and letting it be.” When we are regularly in touch with our dynamic nature, our embodied resilience, we no longer feel such a strong need to push anything away.

The teachers and experts in the practices ahead offer a smorgasbord of practices, tips, and inspirations to help you get creative about how you make time for the gift of movement in your daily life. Explore these possibilities; feel what your body craves; shape your movement practice in whatever way serves you right now. May we all move with courage and curiosity, and in ways that nourish our aliveness, both in mind and body.

Introduction by Amber Tucker

7 Mindful Movement Practices for Daily Life

Start Small

Movement is a valuable ally in bringing more calm, focus, and clarity to our state of mind. Gentle movement helps us tune in to the daily routines that we might otherwise go through on autopilot. This not only refreshes our perspective, it refills our cup with gratitude for what, and who, is present with us. Cultivating a spirit of playfulness and appreciation along the way lets us connect more easily with the people we care about, and it grounds and calms our nervous system.

Mindful Movement Practice: A Soothing Yoga Flow to Help You Choose Yourself

Savor this gentle practice as part of your time to simply be present with yourself. Or, invite a loved one to join you and unwind together, if you so choose.

By Dianne Bondy

While some yoga poses aren’t available to everyone, this slow-paced series of stretches includes options to customize each pose. The focus is on listening to your own body and moving in the way that feels best for your body, letting go of any comparisons to what others can do.

Optional Props:

  • A bolster or cushion to sit on
  • Yoga blocks, books, or paper towel rolls
  • A blanket
  • A bench or a chair without arms
  1. Begin by finding a position that feels comfortable for you: maybe sitting cross-legged on your bolster; you can stretch your legs out long and straight, or out wide to the sides; or bring the soles of your feet together, which may be easier on the knees.
  2. Take a few minutes to tap into your breath. One option is to close the eyes and take your experience inward. If closing your eyes doesn’t feel safe or comfortable, you can also lower your gaze toward the floor, or toward something in the room in front of you.
  3. During this practice, we’ll breathe in through the nose for two, and out through the nose for two, if it feels comfortable. You can also choose to exhale, or both inhale and exhale, through the mouth.
  4. As you inhale, sweep your arms up to the sky. Bring your left hand down either to the bolster or to the mat and reach your right fingertips over toward the left. Inhale and bring both arms back up. Exhale and release your right hand down to the mat, and then reach your left fingertips over toward the right. Just swaying side to side, taking a side bend. Lengthen out of the crown of the head, really reach through the fingertips, and slightly turn your chest up to the sky as you move side to side.
  5. Let’s explore a couple of Cat and Cow variations, either on the mat or sitting on a bench or chair. From the mat, you’ll want to pad your knees and come onto your hands, fingertips spread out wide. Take your knees wider, soften your belly down toward the mat, squeeze between your shoulder blades—and then round your back up to the ceiling. If putting weight into your knees or hands doesn’t feel appropriate to you, you can sit on the chair or bench, placing your hands on your knees and curling the shoulder blades onto the back. Lift your gaze to the sky, and then as you exhale, round the chest. Repeat 3-5 rounds.
  6. Make your way onto your back. Make your way to the floor, and roll over onto your right side and lower yourself down onto your back. Bring the knees in to your heart, one at a time, and gently rock from side to side, just giving your lower back a little massage.
  7. Plant your feet firmly on the mat, then cross the right ankle over the left knee. Your left hand rests on the floor alongside your body, or it can rest out to the side like a cactus arm. With your right hand, you can gently press the right thigh away, noticing how that feels in your body. Or you can draw that left knee in toward the chest, holding on to the top leg, flexing through the heel and pressing your lower back into the mat. On an exhalation, plant your left foot onto the mat. Repeat on the other side.
  8. Next we’ll do Half Happy Baby. Holding on at the back of the right thigh, bring the knee close to the body. Hold on to the ankle, and lift the sole of the foot to the sky. Or, hold on at the outer edge of the foot and draw your knee back toward the floor. If you’ve been standing or sitting all day, this may be a nice release for tight hips. You can also do this in bed before you get up in the morning. It’s all about what feels best in your body: honoring that energy, that moment, that sensation, that breath. Repeat on the left side.
  9. Now, just let your whole body soften into the mat. You can gently tug the shoulder blades underneath you, turning the palms up to the sky, relaxing the jaw, closing the eyes if that feels good, or keeping the gaze soft. For the next few minutes, inhale deeply, and exhale completely.
  10. When you’re ready, begin to bring a little movement to your fingers and toes. Whatever makes you feel comfortable and safe and supported in this posture, always choose it for you. Stretching your arms, maybe your legs, rolling your wrists and your ankles, finding what feels good for you, just stretching the body in a way that feels delicious, as you prepare to end your practice.
Dianne Bondy - A Soothing Yoga Flow to Help You Choose Yourself
Dianne Bondy - A Soothing Yoga Flow to Help You Choose Yourself
Dianne Bondy - A Soothing Yoga Flow to Help You Choose Yourself

Illustrations by Spencer Creelman

Mindful Movement Practice: A New Kind of Social Movement

With a little creativity, even the most ordinary occasion with friends, family, colleagues, or neighbors can be more lively and playful.

By Katy Bowman

With so many wants and needs in our lives, the need to move our bodies more is often the ball we drop. Yet, until very recently, movement was not a separate “ball” for humans to hold; movement and community were woven into the tasks that made up daily life.

If you’re struggling to find time for movement, see if you can adjust tasks you are already doing to a dynamic version that increases your physical activity—no juggling required.

Try it:

Love time with your partner? Swap a dinner out for a hiking date.

If friends (or art or wine!) are your passion, fill a pack with art supplies and a bottle of your favorite vino (or kombucha, or hot tea) and trek through a park for a DIY sip-and-paint with pals.

Meet a friend for coffee—and take it to go on a garden tour.

Take early-rising toddlers on an outdoor sunrise adventure with a portable breakfast.

Start work meetings with a few team-building exercises that are actually stretches for your team.

Start a dynamic book club, where the conversation is on foot or wheels.

Liven up household chores with a dance party, swinging arms and hips to your favorite tune.

Host an active potluck, where neighbors of all ages play casual games of frisbee or basketball and share food.

Experiment together, and have fun! Before long, infusing your relationships with playful and nourishing movement will become second nature.

Savor the Dance of Cooking

Try out these tips to help you find your own little dance the next time you prepare a meal. 

By Lynn Rossy

Delicious is the term used to describe the type of food I hope to eat, but also the way in which I move. Come to a yoga class with me and you will hear me say, “Move in a way that feels delicious.” Delicious means enjoyable, delightful, and pleasant—and we can bring that perspective into the kitchen as we cook. 

1. Turn on some music. I love to start the process of cooking by setting the mood. Something upbeat gets my body moving into action. 

2. Feel your body moving. There are many movements required in the cooking process. Pay attention to the muscles stretching as you reach for ingredients in the top of the cabinet. Practice your squat as you bend down low. Pay attention to the muscles in your arms as you cut those carrots and knead that bread. 

3. Pause for a Breath and a Smell. Cooking can be physically demanding. Pause for a breath and take time to smell the growing aroma of the kitchen. Smile and take your next dance step with curiosity and love.

4. Make it into a Dance. Feel your body moving from place to place as you attend to the food cooking on the stove, glide to the countertop to cut some more vegetables, and to the cupboard for ingredients. If another person is in the kitchen, turn it into a couple’s dance. Honor the space needed for each one of you so you don’t end up spilling the beans on the floor. 

Feed Your Flame

There are countless ways we can shift our world for the better—whether it’s volunteering weekly in our communities, engaging someone in a compassionate conversation, joining an activist group, or creating art that envisions what positive change might look like and energizes us to get there. Showing up with our passion and care is strong fuel for joy and purpose. Yet outward actions are not the whole story here. We need to care for ourselves, too: Healing and replenishing ourselves is part of the healing we wish for others. So let your body and your breath support you in flowing, breathing, and deepening your roots so that we can all continue showing up with revolutionary love.

Mindful Movement Practice: Connect With Your Brave Heart

In this seated yoga practice, we cultivate the tools to nurture, strengthen, and give courage to our fearless hearts.

By Boo Boafo

Connect With Your Brave Heart—Boo Boafo

  • 16:26
  1. Start by finding a comfortable seat. Start to feel your breath coming into your body. Place your right hand on your belly, feeling your breath there, and put your left hand on your heart, feeling your heartbeat. Honor these two functions that keep us in harmony. Gently release your hands to your knees.
  2. Begin to lengthen your inhale and exhale. Imagine the exhale removing all that we don’t need from our body and mind, the inhale embracing everything that nourishes us. What can you embrace in your mind that lets you know you’re safe? And on the exhale, what can you release that does not serve your better good?
  3. Breathe into your heart center. Relax your jaw, your tongue, the space between your eyebrows. We have everything we need inside of us: all the courage, all the stamina, all the forgiveness, all the kindness. Embrace it all as you step into your brave heart.
  4. Inhale, moving your hands up toward the sky. Meet your palms above your head and reach your fingertips up high. Take a long inhale, and as you exhale, draw the shoulders down the back. On your next exhale, turn your palms out and slowly arch your arms out to each side until they are parallel to the mat.
  5. Inhale, bend at the elbows, hinging your forearms up as if mimicking a cactus. With a long exhale, bring your cactus arms closer together until your elbows, wrists, fingers, and palms connect at the centerline of the body. Bow your head and set an intention for your brave heart, with love and kindness as your foundation.
  6. Inhale, reaching upward, and release your intention out into the universe. Take a half twist to the right by lowering your right hand down to the ground behind you while placing your left hand on the outside of the right knee. Inhale, lengthen the spine, and exhale, twisting the ribcage and shoulders to the right.
  7. Inhale, move your right hand high up toward the sky, shifting it all the way over to your left knee or thigh. With the elbows crossed, tuck the chin to the chest, tilt the pelvis up, and let your heart space open into your spine as your shoulders open up. Breathe into that back heart space. Soften the space between your ears.
  8. Inhale, come to a comfortable position. Keeping the elbows gently crossed, hug your shoulders and tell yourself that you love yourself unconditionally. No judgment, just unconditional love. Inhale, reaching the arms up to the sky, exhale, and release.
  9. Now take a half twist to the left. Let your left hand come down to the ground behind you and the right hand come to the outside of the left knee. Inhale to lengthen the spine, exhale to twist to the left.
  10. When you’re ready, move your left hand up toward the sky, moving it all the way over until the left hand meets the right knee or thigh. The elbows are crossed. Tuck the chin to the chest, tilt the pelvis up, and let your heart space open as your shoulders open up.
  11. Inhale and return to a comfortable position. Keeping the elbows gently crossed, hug your shoulders. Bring to mind someone or something that challenges you. Breathe love into that challenge. And if you can’t breathe love into it directly, perhaps consider what tools you can embrace for the better good of all.
  12. Inhale, stretching your arms over your head, releasing. Exhale your arms back down to rest your hands on your knees or thighs. Just sit with that right now as the universal light of interconnectedness shines within you, and within each of us.
Mindful Movement Practices: Connect With Your Brave Heart
Mindful Movement Practices: Connect With Your Brave Heart
Mindful Movement Practices: Connect With Your Brave Heart

Illustrations by Spencer Creelman

Let Nature Move You

Exploring how it feels to move mindfully outdoors can be a deeply awe-inspiring practice. Even when we’re sitting still, we can sense the movement of nature around us, full of moment-to-moment reminders of the continuous state of growth and life surrounding us. Many of us struggle with climate anxiety and grief. When we move with nature, remembering that as human beings we’re not separate from our environment, we often discover small ways in which we can refocus that anxious energy into connection and gratitude. These, after all, are at the heart of our collective desire to respect and protect our planet.

Mindful Movement Practice: Rest in the Movement of Nature

Tuning in to the natural movement of nature can be very soothing and calming, even in the midst of ongoing challenges. You can do this meditation outdoors, or anywhere.

By Jeanne Corrigal

Rest in the Movement of Nature—Jeanne Corrigal

  • 9:48
  1. First, find a posture lying down or sitting that is comfortable for you. Let yourself really rest into this posture, really land into the sense of your body sitting. Noticing the sensations that let you know you’re here, in the body.
  2. If you’re practicing indoors, recall a place in nature that you like to be. This can be a place you imagine, or your backyard, a park nearby, or by the ocean or a lake. Maybe it’s in the forest, in the desert, or by a mountain. As you bring this memory to mind, sense how it feels in your body. Sometimes there can be a little sense of relaxation. Just let this memory come alive for you.
  3. Feel what the body feels like in connection with the Earth. What does it feel like? Underneath your feet or your body? Are you sitting on a stone or rock? Moss? Are you leaning back against a tree, against a boulder, against a hill?
  4. Notice what scents you might smell: the scent of spruce in the forest, or the salty scents of the ocean. What do you smell?
  5. Now, begin to sense the movement around you. What can you hear? Is there a rustle of the leaves with the breeze of the wind? The sound of birds, the sound of waves lapping? What do you hear in the motion, in the movement of nature? And what can you see in your special place? You might see the trees moving, the sunlight shifting. The waves swelling. Birds flying. Notice this motion, this movement, and just be with this movement, in a relaxed, easy way.
  6. Sense your breath moving your body: another aspect of movement in this inner nature. This breath connects your inner nature with outer nature. This breath that moves and breathes you, and moves in your outer environment as well.
  7. Sense how your being is a part of this natural movement. Resting in the breath, like resting in the swell of the ocean, rising and falling. Sensing, in your body, sensations like tingling, perhaps in the feet or the hands. Like a little sense of ripples of the waves on the lake, or the pulsing of the heart, or the pulse in the body as the rivers of water move through every cell of your body, these internal rivers.
  8. Sense the change of temperature in your body, warm and cool. All of these changes are part of this natural movement, internally, externally. Sensing thoughts that rise and pass, like clouds rising and passing in the sky. Emotions, like the rhythm of day and night, or the seasons. We’re resting in nature, this movement, internally and externally. Peaceful and relaxed, resting in the midst of movement and change.
  9. Let yourself rest as best you can in the sense of ease and being carried, being a part of this movement and change, as you go about your day.

Mindful Movement Practice: Practice the Power of the Long Exhale

When we lengthen the exhale, we’re better able to find our power and invite a sense of relaxation to high intensity movement. Longer exhales cause the vagus nerve to send a signal to your brain, activating the parasympathetic nervous system (rest and digest) and easing the sympathetic nervous system (fight, flight, or freeze). The technique I share below is one that I practice when engaging in strenuous physical activity and training. This practice has been instrumental in helping me find my flow. With a longer exhale, I find I can do hard things over longer stretches of time and build my overall endurance in my movement practices, whether that be hitting laps on the stairs, running, hiking, climbing, or a high intensity workout.

By Georgina Miranda

Practice the Power of the Long Exhale—Georgina Miranda

  • 9:42

How to Breathe Into Challenging Movement

  1. Take a few deep breaths in and exhale fully through the mouth, with the intention to get present as you begin your movement practice.
  2. Focus on your breath as it passes through the nostrils, and then try exhaling the air from your lungs with pursed lips.
  3. Begin to take intentionally longer exhales to get used to the feeling and sensation of what this could be like: Breathe in through your nostrils for a count of 1, 2, 3, 4. Breathe out with pursed lips through your mouth for 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and (if you can) 6. Be mindful of your capacity so that your next inhale is not a big gasp of air to compensate for over-exhalation. Aim for smooth transitions of inhales and exhales.
  4. Once you feel in rhythm with this breath count, you can go deeper into your movement activity. For example, at this stage I might transition from walking to running, or pick up the pace of going up stairs, or increasing the repetition of weights, etc.
  5. Over time, work toward a 2 to 1 exhale:inhale ratio.
  6. When you are ready to finish your movement practice, start to slow your pace and breath down. Be sure to give yourself a few moments of stillness or stretching with slow belly breathing, to let your heart rate go down and to honor your practice.

Open Up to Ease

Movement often contributes to energy, connection, and optimism, but it can equally be a part of our restorative practice. Slow, conscious movements can be a doorway to deeper calm, ease, and the mental and physical rest that so often get edged out of our busy schedules. While it may be counterproductive to do an intense workout close to bedtime, some studies suggest that engaging in mindful movement as you finish your day may result in a significantly improved quality of sleep.

Mindful Movement Practice: 5 Stretches to Ease Your Body into Sleep

In this quick bedtime routine, you’ll stretch and relax areas of your body (and mind!) that may have tightened up during the day.

By Cara Bradley

When we give ourselves a chance to release tension and let go of any wakeful or anxious thoughts at bedtime, we’re setting ourselves up to get a good night’s sleep. These nighttime stretches are a simple form of self-care that lets us meet the next day refreshed and confident. Roll out your yoga mat or a soft blanket, and allow yourself to nod off at the end.

1) Cat/Cow

Stretch your upper back, loosen tension in your spine

5 Stretches to Ease Your Body into Sleep

Place your hands on the ground beneath your shoulders and your knees on the ground beneath your hips. Keep your back straight and your head forward. As you inhale gently, drop your belly toward the floor, lift your chest, and look forward, arching your spine slightly. As you exhale, bring your face toward your navel while rounding your back upward. Repeat for 3-5 breaths.

2) Deep Lunge

Stretch the front of your hips

5 Stretches to Ease Your Body into Sleep

From an all fours position, step your right foot forward and slide your left knee further behind you. Place your hands on your knee. Keep your hands on the floor or on your front knee. Hold for 5 breaths. Switch sides.

3) Seated Neck Stretch

Stretch and lengthen both sides of your neck

5 Stretches to Ease Your Body into Sleep

While seated, bring your right hand over your head and place it on your left ear. Gently drop your right ear toward your shoulder. Hold for 5 breaths. Bring your head back to center gently and switch sides, going easy on your neck when you switch. Hold for 5 breaths.

4) Dynamic Bridge

Stretch the chest, neck, shoulders, and spine

5 Stretches to Ease Your Body into Sleep

Place your arms flat on the ground by your sides, palms facing down. Place both feet on the floor under your bent knees. Make sure your back is flat and your body feels centered and balanced. Then, as you inhale, lift your hips up toward the ceiling, creating a straight line from your knees, down your thighs, to your chest. If it feels comfortable, interlock your fingers under your body and shimmy your shoulder blades toward each other to open your chest muscles. Hold for 8 deep breaths.

5) Knee to Chest and Twist

Stretch out your low back and hips

5 Stretches to Ease Your Body into Sleep

Illustrations by Spencer Creelman

Stretch out your legs and slide them together. Hug your right knee into your chest, clasping your fingers around your right shin, to stretch your low back and hips. Hold for 3 breaths. Release your knee and send it to the left for a gentle spinal twist. Turn your gaze to the right. Hold for 3 breaths, then switch sides.

After this last pose, let yourself take a few slow, deep inhales, and a few long, comfortable exhales. When you’re ready, open your eyes and notice how you feel. Slowly get up and crawl right into bed.

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Black woman outdoors in nature with mountains and blue sky background, taking a deep breath with her eyes closed and a peaceful expression.
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About the author

Amber Tucker

Amber Tucker is a senior editor at Mindful Magazine. Originally from western Newfoundland, she currently lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia, with her partner, two cats, and assorted rodents.

About the author

Dianne Bondy

Dianne Bondy is an accessible yoga teacher, social justice activist, author, and the leader of the Yoga For All movement. Her inclusive approach to yoga empowers people of any shape, size, ethnicity, and ability to practice. Follow her @diannebondyyogaofficial

About the author

Katy Bowman

Katy Bowman is a biomechanist and bestselling author. Her latest book, Rethink Your Position, will be out May 2023. Follow her @NutritiousMovement

About the author

Boo Boafo

About the author

Jeanne Corrigal

Jeanne Corrigal is a Guiding Teacher at Saskatoon Insight Meditation Community. Jeanne teaches meditation, compassion practices, and Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR). She has studied and practiced mindfulness for over two decades, becoming certified with several of the leading meditation organizations in North America.

About the author

Georgina Miranda

Georgina is a global leader in change, transformation, mindfulness, conscious leadership development and the advancement of women. She is also a mountaineer athlete and activist igniting inspired action to end violence against women and to promote the safekeeping of our planet. She is the CEO & founder of She Ventures, a social enterprise unleashing the untapped power of women around the world. Georgina serves as Entrepreneur in Residence (EIR) at 4xi Consulting, reshaping the future of work and customer experience. Her clients include Fortune 500 companies, entrepreneurs, conscious leaders, and those called to shift mountains within themselves and the world around them. She is a highly sought after international transformation coach, public speaker, and management consultant. Explore more of her work here.

About the author

Cara Bradley

Cara Bradley is a seasoned mind-body expert dedicated to advancing mind-body education through movement, mindfulness and the science of human performance. She provides evidence-based mind-body approaches to global wellness brands, Fortune 100 companies and top-ranked sports teams, is the author of "On The Verge: Wake Up, Show Up, and Shine" and the Founder of Verge Yoga and Meditation Center. Cara was voted a "Top 12 Most Powerful Women in the Mindfulness Movement" by Mindful.org.

About the author

Lynn Rossy

Lynn Rossy is a health psychologist and author of The Mindfulness-Based Eating Solution. She developed and teaches the empirically-validated 10-week mindful eating program called “Eat for Life.” She is a Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction teacher and serves on the The Center for Mindful Eating board. Join her in person at Omega Institute to learn the practices in her latest book Savor Every Bite.