The Beauty of SLOW-LIVING & How To Make It A Lifestyle

Although there isn’t a sole definition for the term ‘slow-living’, there is a concept to this movement, and that is the idea we need to slow down and adopt a leisurely pace while enjoying life’s simple pleasures, and bringing more peace and mindfulness to our lives.

The Symptoms of Living Fast

Busyness has suddenly become sexy, but the side effects are certainly not.

This relentless sense of hustle, urgency and the need to constantly be on the go can be taxing, and if not dealt with, can have long-term consequences.

Living fast might look like this:

  • Filling your schedule with social events and obligations at the expense of all your free time

  • Making decisions based on short-term enjoyment or efficiency instead of your values

  • Short and shallow breathing

  • Often feeling overwhelmed

  • Irritable

  • An over-consumption of junk food

  • Sugar cravings, weight gain

  • Minimal to no exercise

  • Late nights, irregular sleep patterns

  • Exhaustion

  • Dull skin, tired eyes, ageing faster than your years

The Principles of ‘Slow-Living’

The average lifestyle, particularly in Western culture is pretty fast. From the moment we wake up, it’s go-go-go, and by the time you know it, the day is over.

Think about what your average day might consist of. Rushing to catch the train to work? Busy meetings? Office chatter?

The odd scroll on social media during your lunch break as you wolf down your lunch before returning to your desk, then finally ending the day going home, usually during ‘rush hour’, before having a few hours of rest at home before doing it all over again.

And that’s just Monday to Friday. If your weekends are full, you are non-stop, every day.

It’s as though you are racing through each day trying to get to the next thing, but what exactly are you racing towards?

There are many ways to practice slow living, and each practice works differently for different people, although you can’t completely step away from every-day commitments, you can incorporate daily habits which help you to move at an unhurried pace feeling calmer and more balanced.

Examples of slow-living

Journaling

Quietening your mind is a great way to disconnect from distraction, and focus inward to your thoughts and emotions.

As bizarre as it sounds, most people don’t know who they really are.

Every day is filled with outside noise from friends, family, partners and work colleagues, as a result of this, decisions are likely to be based on external influences.

How can you know what you want if you don’t know who you are?

If you don’t spend time with your thoughts, how can you know the difference between which thoughts are your own, and which are based upon the opinions you have from outside influences?

Use journaling as a way to explore your thoughts and empty the chatter from your mind.

Look out for journal prompts on the Coffee Moon Instagram feed, they’ll help you get started.

Gratitude

Practicing gratitude requires you to be thankful for what you have in your life, the people, your job, a roof over your head, and access to clean water. Whatever it is, every day find something you can be grateful for.

Acceptance

Some things are out of your control, instead of walking around with pent up frustration, let it go. Accept things for what they are, not what you want them to be.

Slow Exercise and Deep Breathing

Yoga and Pilates demand your body to slow down and focus on your breathing techniques which we rarely remember to do through moments which are usually chaotic.

Digital Detoxes

The digital world is fun, yet at the same time, demanding. With so much information and entertainment at our fingertips, it’s hard to know when to pause.

Don’t wait until you feel overwhelmed, take time out. Whether it’s social media, blogs, podcasts, or all three, give your mind a rest.

In my personal opinion anywhere from a month minimum away from social media is the most effective, but you may feel the benefits after just a week.

Use this time to read books, and physical ones, try new recipes, write, paint, call a friend etc.

Schedule rest

Give yourself a break, a real one. And Sunday doesn’t count. Sunday doesn’t count because quite frankly by the time it gets to 5pm you’re already thinking about Monday morning.

Schedule in free weekends where you have no plans, you don’t need to force yourself into finding something to do. Allow your body a full weekend of recovery before the week returns, it’s the least it deserves.

The Benefits of Slow-Living

A slow-living lifestyle comes with an abundance of benefits. Have you ever been on holiday to an exotic island and seen how the locals live?

Notice they tend to be walking steadier, and eating slower, and if you’ve been to Barbados, you will know it could take you half the day to be served by a cashier at the bank because to hurry is a myth.

This is usually frustrating to us as Westerners, and at the same time when you think about the results of their lifestyles, you can’t help but notice they look great for their age, due to lower incomes they regularly cook meals from scratch reducing the chance of becoming overweight, and they are living much longer.

Practicing slow-living often brings:

  • Better health

  • Increased happiness

  • Improved mental clarity, making better decisions

  • Sustainable relationships and genuine friendships

  • A healthier body

  • More energy

  • Healthier-looking appearance (skin, hair, nails)

  • Reduced stress and anxiety

Final thoughts

Today, rushing through life has become somewhat ‘normal’. It ‘s become ‘normal’ to suffer from headaches after work, it’s ‘normal’ to gain indigestion after every meal, it’s ‘normal’ to be busy every weekend, but it doesn’t have to be.

Listen to your body, feel for signals, look for signs of where your body is asking you to slow down.

If you spend most of your time rushing around from one thing to the other, the chances are you can’t even tell what your body wants because you haven’t taken a moment to tune in.

Study each area of your life, identify where needs attention, what needs to change, and how you can take a slower approach.

Tune out the chaos and connect with yourself again, you’ll soon see the smaller details of what life has to offer.


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Patrice Monique

Patrice Monique is a London-based self-development and lifestyle writer.

With a deep appreciation for personal transformation Patrice Monique is dedicated to helping you rewrite your story and make your dream life a reality.

https://www.coffeemoon.co.uk
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