Mindfulness Techniques for Carers
- Nicola

- Nov 10, 2025
- 2 min read
Updated: Nov 24, 2025

đ Tips for Mindfulness
đ 1ď¸âŁ Focus on the Basics
If you support others, you already understand the core principles of wellbeing:
Leisure. Rest. Work. Self-care.
Theyâre the same foundations you encourage for the people you care for â and they work for you too.
Think of it like this:
Leisure:Â Do one small thing that brings you joy each day â music, a walk, a puzzle, a cup of tea in peace.
Rest:Â Real rest isnât just sleep. Itâs permission to stop, even for five minutes.
Work:Â Structure and routine give you purpose â but donât let them swallow every part of you.
Self-care: The small daily acts that remind you that you matter too.
Mindfulness simply helps you notice which part youâre missing â and bring the balance back.
đ 2ď¸âŁ Start Small (Really Small)
You donât need an hour, a mat, or a mantra.
Try this instead:
When you wash your hands, feel the water.
When you drink your tea, actually taste it.
When you walk to your car or the bus stop, notice the air, the ground, the sounds around you.
These are micro-moments of mindfulness â five seconds here, ten seconds there â and they help ground your mind before it spirals into stress.
If thatâs all you ever do, thatâs enough.
đ 3ď¸âŁ Bring Your Attention Back to Your Body
Carers are brilliant at focusing on other peopleâs physical and emotional needs, but we often ignore our own.
When you start to feel overwhelmed, stop and do a quick body scan:
Notice your shoulders (are they up near your ears?)
Notice your jaw (is it clenched?)
Notice your breathing (are you holding it?)
Then take a slow, deliberate breath and release some of that tension.
đ 4ď¸âŁ Make Mindfulness Fit You
Mindfulness doesnât have to look a certain way. For some, itâs sitting quietly. For others, itâs gardening, baking, painting, knitting, or driving in silence.
You can find mindfulness anywhere â in the rhythm of folding laundry, listening to music, or walking your dog.
If you care for someone with complex needs, include them too â enjoy the moment together, even if itâs just watching the birds for two minutes or feeling the sun on your faces.
Itâs about connection, not control.
đ 5ď¸âŁ Check in with Your Mind Like You Check in with Others
You spend so much time checking on others â their mood, comfort, and wellbeing â but how often do you check on your own?
Pause once a day and ask yourself:
What do I need right now?
Whatâs one small thing that would make today easier?
What am I grateful for, even if itâs tiny?
You donât need to journal or record it â just ask, notice, and respond.
Because mindfulness isnât about emptying your mind â itâs about listening to it.
đąÂ Itâs Not About Doing It Right â Itâs About Doing It at All
If mindfulness feels impossible, youâre probably the person who needs it most.
It doesnât need to be fancy or time-consuming. Itâs about paying attention to yourself with the same care you give everyone else



