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7 simple rituals that help you feel like yourself again
BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM
There’s a specific kind of “off” that’s difficult to capture or express in words. No, you’re not feeling sick or sad. You’re not stressed exactly. Just… off. A little irritable, a little flat, carrying something you can’t quite put your finger on. You’ve cleaned the kitchen, gone for a walk, scrolled past a hundred wellness tips, and none of it has helped bring you back into balance. Sound familiar?
Another workout or productivity hack probably isn’t what this is asking for. What tends to help is a reset: something slow and deliberate that gives your nervous system a chance to catch up. Spiritual and cultural traditions around the world have built rituals around exactly this. Most of them take less than ten minutes.
Pause before you try to fix anything
When something feels off, the instinct is to solve it: scroll, distract, push through, add something to the list. But pushing through what you haven’t acknowledged usually just buries it a little deeper.
“When my energy feels unsettled, I try not to immediately fix it,” says Misun Delmon, a wellness practitioner and ritual designer. “My first ritual is usually creating stillness. I dim the lights, open a window if possible, and burn either incense or something grounding. Then I sit quietly for a few minutes without my phone or distractions.”
It’s easy to miss how much you’re carrying when you’re always in motion. A few quiet minutes can be enough to notice what’s weighing on you, and sometimes noticing is most of the work.
Use scent and smoke with intention
Burning sage, incense, or palo santo has become popular in wellness spaces, but these practices go back centuries across many cultures. What made them meaningful was never the smoke itself. It was the intention behind lighting it.
“A lot of people treat palo santo or sage like a quick room fragrance,” says Delmon. “But traditionally these materials were used much more intentionally. Before lighting anything, I always recommend slowing down for a moment and asking yourself: What am I trying to release? What energy do I want to invite in?”
Open a window, move through your space a little more slowly, and let the ritual be about the question rather than the scent. Whether you’re processing a hard week or a low feeling you can’t explain, approaching it with intention changes the experience.
Try a ten-minute reset ritual
“One of the simplest rituals is what I call a reset ritual,” says Delmon. “Open a window. Light incense or a candle. Slowly tidy one small area around you, even just your desk or bedside table. Take a few deep breaths and consciously release tension from your body.” Then: “Sit quietly for two minutes without consuming anything. No scrolling, no music, no stimulation.”
Fresh air, something familiar to smell, one tidied surface, two minutes of not taking anything in. Small things, but in a day that never stops, that’s a real interruption.
Clear something physical
When things pile up around us, they tend to feel heavier inside too. That connection between environment and inner state is why sweeping, cleaning, and organizing show up in renewal rituals in cultures around the world and throughout history.
You don’t need to overhaul anything. Pick one small thing: change your sheets, clear a cluttered surface, throw out any dead flowers, wipe down a mirror, sort out your entryway. The goal isn’t a perfect space. It’s movement where something felt stuck.
Create a space that belongs to you
Most people have one spot in the house where they naturally feel calmer. If you don’t have one yet, it’s worth making one. It doesn’t need to be elaborate: a candle you love, a few books, a plant, a journal, one object that means something to you. What matters is that going there is a reason to slow down.
Over time your body learns what that corner means. It starts to associate it with rest before you’ve even settled in. That’s not a small thing.
Let go of what you’ve been holding onto
Not all the heaviness we carry comes from what’s happening right now. Some of it comes from what we’re still holding long after a situation has ended: an unresolved conversation, a relationship that’s shifted, expectations that no longer fit where we are. Even good changes can leave behind a kind of residue that takes up space.
Symbolic rituals have persisted across so many traditions partly because they help create closure when life doesn’t offer it on its own. Writing down what’s circling in your mind, journaling about what you’re ready to release, or naming what you’ve been carrying can be enough to start moving through it. The ritual itself matters less than the act of asking: what am I still holding that doesn’t need to come with me?
Build a nighttime ritual that signals the end of the day
For a lot of people, the day doesn’t end when work does. One screen becomes another, and sleep happens but real rest doesn’t.
Something as small as reading for a few minutes, stretching, or lighting a candle in a quieter room can signal to your nervous system that the doing part is over, not as another wellness box to check, but as a real transition between one day and the next.
“I always say ritual does not need to be complicated,” says Delmon. “Even lighting one candle with intention can become a meaningful act of emotional closure.”
Not perfection, not an elaborate practice. Just a few deliberate minutes to put down what’s heavy before tomorrow starts.
The post 7 simple rituals that help you feel like yourself again first appeared on The Optimist Daily: Making Solutions the News.