Finding Calm in Five Minutes

In a world that celebrates constant motion, stillness can feel like a luxury—or even a rebellion. But taking just five minutes to pause, breathe, and be present may be the most powerful thing you do all day. 

By Marth Mora

Sometimes, the world feels too loud to hear yourself think.

I used to rush through my mornings like it was a competition. Emails, messages, and endless to-do lists filled my head before breakfast. I didn’t even realize I was holding my breath most of the time. One morning, while waiting for my laptop to start up, I decided to do nothing. No phone, no music, no distractions. Just me, sitting quietly, listening to the sound of my own breathing.

At first, it felt strange, almost uncomfortable. I kept thinking about what I “should” be doing. But after a few quiet minutes, I noticed something—my shoulders were no longer tense, and my thoughts weren’t spinning in circles. The noise in my head softened, and for the first time that day, I felt calm.

That simple pause didn’t fix everything, but it made the day easier to handle. It reminded me that peace doesn’t always come from doing more. Sometimes, it comes from stopping, even for a little while. Calm isn’t something we find after we finish everything—it’s something we can choose amid the chaos.

Five minutes of stillness can change the way your day unfolds. It can help you breathe, think, and feel more like yourself again.

The first few times I tried this, I felt a quiet resistance inside me. My mind would wander to unfinished tasks, and a part of me whispered that I was wasting time. But I learned that the stillness we resist is often the one we need most. Our bodies know when we’re running on empty; our minds crave pauses the same way our lungs crave air.

Eventually, five minutes began to feel like a refuge—an island of calm in the middle of an overbooked day. Sometimes, I would close my eyes and simply listen: to the faint hum of the refrigerator, the soft rhythm of my own breath, the steady ticking of the clock. Other times, I would open the window and let the morning air touch my skin, the sunlight warming my face as if reminding me that I was still here, still alive.

Those moments didn’t make the world quieter, but they made me quieter inside it. I realized that the chaos outside isn’t always the problem—it’s the noise within that drains us. And when that inner noise softens, even briefly, life starts to feel a little lighter, a little clearer.

The beauty of a five-minute pause is that it doesn’t require a special place or a perfect schedule. You can do it anywhere—before you open your inbox, while waiting for your coffee to brew, or even sitting in traffic. The key is to notice: your breath, your heartbeat, your thoughts passing like clouds.

When you give yourself permission to pause, you remind your mind that rest isn’t the opposite of productivity—it’s what makes it possible.

So take five minutes today. Sit quietly. Breathe deeply. Let the world spin without you for a while. In that gentle silence, you might just rediscover your center—and realize that calm isn’t something you find. It’s something you allow.

Share this Article
Facebook
X
LinkedIn
WhatsApp
Email

More News

banner-SS-copy-7
Climate Change Is Now a Health Policy Issue
For many years, climate change was viewed primarily through an environmental lens. That perspective is...
banner-SS-copy-10
The Rubicon Principle
By Dr. Tony Leachon  A past president of the PHIlippine College of Physicians once asked...
banner-SS-copy-6
10 Ways Filipino Families Can Protect Their Health From Climate Change
By the H&L Editorial Team 1. Stay Ahead of Heat Waves Drink water regularly, even before feeling...
banner-SS-copy-5
THE FEVERED PLANET
How Climate Change Is Making Us Sick For decades, climate change was discussed largely in terms...
banner-SS-copy-4
THE DOCTOR WHO CAME HOME
How Dr. Rollin P. Tabuena turned a childhood dream into a lifetime of healing, leadership, and service Where...
banner-SS-copy-2
The Day He Stopped Looking Over the Fence
It is easier than ever to compare our lives with those of others. Their successes. Their families. Their...
banner-SS-copy-1
Patience: The Waiting Game
By Henrylito D. Tacio  “Patience asks us to live the moment to the fullest, to be completely...
High Falls from a distance
High Falls: The other waterfall shared by the United States and Canada
High Falls from a distance. Words and Photos by Henrylito D. Tacio When Filipinos talk about a waterfall...
banner-copy4-copy-3
What To Do—and Not Do—When Severe Abdominal Pain Strikes
✔ DO Stay Hydrated Small sips of water may help prevent dehydration if vomiting is mild. Observe...
banner-copy4-copy-1
When Waiting Can Be Dangerous
One of the most common statements physicians hear in emergency rooms is: “Akala ko mawawala lang.” (I...