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
- Sit quietly and ask: "What is between me and feeling fine right now?"
- As each concern arises, acknowledge it and imagine setting it aside — on a shelf, outside the door, wherever feels right.
- Check: "If I set that aside, how am I now?" and repeat until you reach a quieter place.
- 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.
7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).