Stay in the Present
Staying in the present means being here and now. If you stop and think there is so much
keeping our minds busy. Our country has gone through a lot since the pandemic started and
the president gave the stay-at-home orders and schools were closed. Causing many to
constantly be concerned with the business due to COVID and loss of job and having to teach
kids at home or worry where their next meal will come from or how do I pay for childcare and
feed my family. Our minds are thinking about so much constantly.
Being present will force you not to ruminate on the past negatives or the future unknowns.
Staying in the present can cause us to look at what is happening now. You’ll divert your energy
away from what is right in front of you. In mental health you need all your energy to help you
get through difficult times. For example, when you are depressed, you are not seeing or
thinking clearly about what is in front of you. You are allowing your mind to stay in the past and
constantly relive the negative that is causing your psyche to go in the wrong direction.
Therapists continue to increase their education by learning and getting certified in therapies to
help the different mental health diagnosis and all continue to mention the importance of
staying in the present.
When individuals continue to revisit the past where something bad has happened to them your
mind is forced to relive the hurt and the pain. Our minds continue to replay the images. Our
minds are busy and moving and if we do not learn ways to control it – it can get out of hand.
The mind is where our thoughts generate our feelings and our behavior. When our thoughts are
negative it can produce sadness, anger, distress, anxiety, depression, worry, and many more
feelings that keeps us stuck and unable to make good decisions, or smile, or make friends, or
see the good in anyone or anything.
Things you can do to stay in the present
Practice mindfulness. Mindfulness is when you concentrate on the here and now. It’s paying
attention to what is going on around you now. Staying focus, giving your full attention. Try
mindful eating. Concentrate and look at the food on your plate, think about how it was made,
how long you think it took to make, can you smell the flavors, observe the details of the colors
on the plate, think about the health benefits, count your chews of each spoonful, etc.
Do deep breathing exercises. When you start to feel stressed or anxious about the things that
are going on around you step away and have a seat and gently close your eyes and put your
hand on your heart and take slow deep breaths until you can focus on what you are doing and
what is going on around you.
Meditation is a good way to bring your attention back to the here and now. Meditation is a
technique based on Hindu traditions. This is a technique to teach relaxation and help to clear
your mind from busyness of day-to-day activity.
Staying in the present does not mean you no longer remember the past or don’t think of the
future. Those thoughts will always be there but will not hijack you’re your feelings and behavior
because you focus on the here and now.
Staying in the present can allow you to make better decisions and free your mind to be more
creative, and it quiet your mind from those negative thoughts that will try to sabotage your
good feelings from coming out. Being in the present can cause you to be happy and future
oriented.
As always if you are having trouble with this topic, no worries, I would recommend that you
contact your local 211 operator to help you get connected with a license therapist that can help
you with learning to stay in the present. If you are having thoughts of suicide dial 988 or call the
U.S. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-TALK (8255) any time day or night.











