Clear a space

Set down each burden one by one to find the calm place underneath them.

Why it works

Attentional resources are limited, and ruminative thoughts keep the nervous system in a low-level threat mode. Clearing a space works by externalizing each concern — imagining setting it some distance away — which interrupts the rumination loop without suppressing the concern. Creating even a small inner clearing activates the parasympathetic system because the brain reads "no immediate demand" as a safety signal.

How to do it

  1. Sit quietly and ask: "What is between me and feeling fine right now?"
  2. As each concern arises, acknowledge it and imagine setting it aside — on a shelf, outside the door, wherever feels right.
  3. Check: "If I set that aside, how am I now?" and repeat until you reach a quieter place.
  4. Notice that quieter place as real and inhabitable, however briefly.

Evidence

Clearing a space is used clinically as both a standalone stress-reduction exercise and the opening step of Focusing. The attention-management mechanism is consistent with research on cognitive offloading and rumination interruption, though the Focusing-specific step itself has not been isolated in controlled trials. (mechanistic)

The mechanism is plausible and aligns with attentional-control research; direct RCT evidence for this specific step does not exist.

Common mistake

Trying to solve or analyze each concern while clearing it, which re-engages the problem rather than setting it aside. The goal is acknowledgment and temporary distance, not resolution.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach opens a session by asking what is sitting heaviest right now, then guides you to set each item outside the conversation before moving into the focus of the session.

Start with IX Coach

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