Finding Focus When the World Wants You Scattered
April 1, 2026Some weeks arrive quietly. Others burst through the door like theyâve been waiting to test your balance. This week was the second kind â full of news alerts, unexpected emotions, new opportunities, and the kind of internal noise that makes you forget what you were doing in the first place.
It started with the Supreme Court ruling on Coloradoâs law limiting âconversion therapy.â When the headline flashed across my phone, I felt my chest tighten. I reacted â quickly, emotionally, and without context. It wasnât until later, sitting on the edge of my bed with the article actually open in front of me, that I realized how far my initial reaction had drifted from the facts. And in that moment, I felt something familiar: the quiet click of understanding returning.
That click â that shift from reaction to response â is the same thing I teach in yoga, in training sessions, in my own life. But itâs humbling to notice how easily I forget it.
And then, as if on cue, more political announcements rolled in. One after another. Each one crafted to pull attention, stir emotion, and keep us slightly off balance. I could feel my focus scattering like leaves in the wind. Not because I donât care â but because caring without grounding is exhausting.
What surprised me was where I found my footing again.
It wasnât in the news. It wasnât in the analysis. It was in the small, real moments of my week.
A new training client walking in with that mix of hope and hesitation. A message from another trainer asking if I could sub their class â a simple request that somehow made me feel trusted and seen. Three auditions arriving in the span of a few days, each one asking me to step into a character, breathe into a new world, and make bold choices in the moment.
Auditions are funny that way. They demand presence. They donât care about the news cycle or the noise in your head. They ask you to listen, to respond, to take a risk. They pull you back into your body â into breath, into instinct, into focus.
And somewhere between the training sessions, the auditions, and the quiet moments walking through Denver, I realized something:
Focus isnât something I lost. Itâs something I have to keep choosing.
Every day. Every moment. Every breath.
The world will always offer us reasons to scatter. Itâs built that way now â fast, loud, reactive. But our bodies offer us something different. A slower rhythm. A steadier truth. A place to return to.
And thatâs really what this week taught me: When I pause long enough to feel my feet on the ground, the noise stops owning me.
A Simple Practice for a Scattered Week
If youâre feeling pulled in a dozen directions, hereâs a small practice thatâs been helping me:
The One-Breath Reset
- Stop where you are. Donât fix anything yet. Just pause.
- Take one slow breath in through your nose. Feel your ribs expand. Feel your belly soften.
- Exhale longer than you inhaled. Let your shoulders drop. Let your jaw unclench.
- Name whatâs actually happening. Not the story. Not the headline. Just the moment: âIâm overwhelmed.â âIâm distracted.â âIâm okay.â
- Choose one next step. Not five. Not the whole plan. Just one.
Thatâs it. One breath. One truth. One step.
Itâs astonishing how much focus returns when we give ourselves permission to slow down.
The world may stay loud, but we donât have to. And every time we choose to respond instead of react, we reclaim a little more of our presence â and a little more of our peace.
