Issue 02: The Art of Mindfulness
Welcome to Road Trip to Younger—a magazine on a mission to turn ageing upside down. In this edition: journey into the age-defying, joy-inducing world of mindfulness.
Welcome fellow road trippers! 🚗
I'm excited to have you here for Issue 02 of Road Trip to Younger magazine.
Here’s where your Year of Joy begins.
Across 2025, we’ll be exploring that magic meridian where joy intersects with vibrant healthy ageing. It all begins with a special focus on the Art of Mindfulness to power up a whole load of joyful transformation over the year ahead.
The science is compelling – mindfulness can help us lose weight, protect our heart, expand our grey matter, turn back our cellular clocks, influence our genes, and so much more. In fact, as we’ll soon see, it’s a true five-star destination, delivering on five of the eight Road Tripper's guiding principles of thriving longevity.
It's also like your passport to peace, perspective, presence, and self-compassion. Think of it as your daily day spa for body and mind. I honestly could not think of a more worthy first-ever Road Trip to Younger Travel Guide.
So many people say to me: “I can’t meditate - my mind won’t turn off.” (Hint: if you’re turning your mind off, you’re doing it all wrong.) Or they think they need to sit in lotus position “ommm”-ing.
As you’re about to discover, there’s no complicated techniques or hours of cross-legged sitting required for this life-changing road trip. Just simple roadmaps and strategies that work for real life (and real knees!).
Let’s go!
PS A big thank you for your wonderful feedback on Issue 01 The Christmas Survival Guide. Special gratitude to
for her support and call out on the cover as "one of the most brilliant things I've seen this year!"What if there was a GPS for joyful ageing…
Let's start with checking the Road Tripper's Age-Well Compass. Specially crafted for women 50-plus, it guides all our journeys round here, taking us from wherever we are now towards Younger. In road tripping language that means towards your most optimised lifespan, healthspan, and 'joyspan'. The eight compass points represent the key guiding principles of healthy longevity, as distilled from a deep-dive into a consensus across leading experts.
This compass helps us rate each destination in our Road Trip to Younger Travel Guides. 15-Minute Mindfulness earns its 5-star rating by taking us towards five of these eight compass points.
So take a look, then let's hit the road!
Ten years ago, in her best-selling book, Thrive, Arianna Huffington had this to say about mindfulness:
"Study after study shows that meditation and mindfulness training profoundly affect every aspect of our lives - our bodies, our minds, our physical health, and our emotional and spiritual well-being. It's not quite the fountain of youth, but it's pretty close."
Since then, the evidence has only mounted further.
In fact, if tapping into a life of healthy ageing is on your bucket list, and you're not already consistently practicing mindfulness, the latest science says it's time to jump onboard.
But what exactly is mindfulness and how do you get there?
Essentially mindfulness is one of many types of meditation, and perhaps the most researched in terms of its health benefits. Pioneering academic and practitioner, Jon Kabat-Zinn, describes mindfulness as a practice of "awareness" and of "paying attention, on purpose, in the present moment, non-judgementally".
That last bit, "non-judgementally" is about turning down the volume on judging yourself or your thoughts. And yes, you will find yourself doing this- even the most seasoned veterans do it too! We have a simple toolkit to help. This is where we grow self compassion, and don’t we all need more of that.
Why 15-Minute Mindfulness?
Just as mindfulness is one of the most studied types of meditation, 15-minutes as a daily practice is one of the most researched protocols. This means we have a good indication of the range of research-based benefits we're likely to enjoy.
That said, research shows that even very brief mindfulness practices can offer some meaningful benefits. A study by the University of Cambridge found that just five minutes of mindfulness practice could help reduce reactivity to stress. Other research has shown that "micro-practices" of 1-3 minutes throughout the day can help maintain focus and reduce anxiety. We'll cover a range of routes to take in our Destination: Mindfulness Road Maps.
Back to the Age-Well Compass—you can now see where we're headed. The five magic compass points that make 15-Minute Mindfulness a 5-star destination towards healthy thriving ageing are:
Boss Your Body
Nurture Your Neurons
Cultivate Peace
Sleep Sweetly
Optimise Your Hormones
Starting with Boss Your Body, let's take a deep dive into all the Key Attractions of Destination: Mindfulness, compass-point-by-compass-point.
TIP: Stay tuned til the end to discover how to boost Destination: Mindfulness to a six-star destination 🌟
This compass point is about monitoring and taking control of your body's core systems
As we age, our biological systems require strategic support rather than quick fixes. Research shows a consistent mindfulness practice positively impacts circulatory and metabolic body systems - and even at the molecular level, through our gene expression. Here’s how:
📈 Helps maintain a healthy weight by balancing blood sugar, reducing stress eating, and supporting natural appetite control
📈 Reduces cardiovascular disease risk factors and supports heart health
📈 Helps regulate blood pressure levels
📈 Improves metabolic markers associated with diabetes risk
📈 Influences gene expression, including genes involved in inflammation
This compass point is about enhancing and protecting your cognitive wellbeing
Research suggests that regular mindfulness practice may contribute to better brain health. Though more studies are needed to fully understand these benefits, here are some ways mindfulness has been shown to keep your mind sharp:
🧠 Helps maintain healthy brain tissue that naturally changes as we age
🧠 Encourages your brain to form new connections, like creating helpful mental shortcuts
🧠 Supports your ability to plan, solve problems, and make clear decisions
🧠 Helps you think more quickly and adapt to new situations with greater ease
This compass point is about the importance of growing your inner calm and managing stress to protect both your mind and your body.
Think of your body's stress response like a car's emergency brake – helpful in urgent situations but not meant to be constantly engaged. For women over 50, juggling life's many roles can keep our stress levels higher than they should be. But mindfulness helps. Here’s how:
🌱 Lowers stress hormones by teaching your body to shift out of ‘high alert’ mode
🌱 Helps you recover more quickly from stressful moments, which becomes more important after 50
🌱 Gives your body more time in ‘rest and repair’ mode by breaking the cycle of constant stress
“Persistent negative emotions and psychological stress… have a huge influence on metabolic and immune health.”
- Luigi Fontana, The Path to Longevity, 2020 (Hardie Grant)
This compass point is about engineering your sleep strategy to support repair, recovery, renewal and restorative rest
Quality sleep is like your body's nightly pit stop on the Road Trip to Younger - it repairs, refreshes, and recharges your body. After 50, many women find this gets interrupted by night sweats, racing thoughts, and hormonal changes. The good news? Research suggests that regular mindfulness practice may help smooth the path to better sleep. Here's how:
💤 Helps reset your natural sleep rhythm, making it easier to fall asleep and wake refreshed
💤 Calms your mind's "chatter" at bedtime and helps you drift back to sleep if you wake
💤 Supports your body's natural sleep hormones that often get disrupted with age
💤 Helps you spend more time in deep, restorative sleep when your body does its best repair work
This compass point is about fine-tuning your body's engine and mastering the controls of your natural rhythms and shifts
Think of hormones as your body's sophisticated control system. During midlife, this system needs extra tuning to keep running smoothly. Research suggests that regular mindfulness practice may help maintain these delicate adjustments. Here's how:
⚖️ Helps tame stress hormones that can throw other hormonal systems off balance
⚖️ Helps regulate hormones that control energy levels and healthy metabolism
⚖️ Makes it easier for your body to adjust to natural hormonal changes
Now, the fun bit! Let’s jump into your Guided Tour and Road Maps to Destination: Mindfulness, including that bonus upgrade to make this a 6-Star Destination.
Here’s where the rubber meets the road, as they say. Your journey to enjoy all the benefits of a Destination: Mindfulness starts here.
Setting up your mindfulness practice
Make yourself comfortable. Experiment with sitting, standing and lying down. Add cushions, bolsters, blankets and any other props that make it feel good for you. Creating the right environment helps establish a sustainable practice.
Find a quiet place. It may be indoors or outdoors—ideally where you won't be interrupted. This helps minimise external distractions and allows you to focus inwardly more easily.
Consistency is key. Try to practice at the same time every day, whether it's in the morning, during your lunch break, or before bed. The more consistent you are, the more natural it will feel and the easier it becomes to maintain.
Create a ritual. Pair your mindfulness practice with sipping your favourite tea, or lighting a candle. These small touches can enhance the experience and make it even more enjoyable, helping to anchor it as part of your daily routine.
How to practice mindfulness
Other than the importance of being in the present, there is no single ‘right way’ to practice mindfulness. Over time, you’ll find what works best for you.
Here’s a place to start
🧘🏽♀️ Take a few deep breaths. Enjoy them. Send your inner-overachiever on a holiday. Put any sense of "I MUST be mindful!" away.
🧘🏽♀️ As you breathe, quietly point your thoughts and senses towards the absolute present—to the 'nowness of the now'. This immersive focus on the present moment is what defines mindfulness meditation.
🧘🏽♀️ Gently focus on the sound and feeling of the cool breath coming into your nose, and sense your abdomen rising as you breathe in.
🧘🏽♀️ Be aware of your abdomen naturally falling as the warm air moves out through your mouth.
🧘🏽♀️ Continue to listen to your natural calm breath. Being fully focused on your breath is one of the surest ways to be in the present moment.
🧘🏽♀️ Feel yourself seamlessly stringing together 'now' moments into a beautiful stream, moment upon moment.
🧘🏽♀️ Sense the freedom of being within this stream of 'now' moments, uninhibited by thoughts of the past or the future.
🧘🏽♀️ You may become aware of other sounds. As they enter your consciousness, experience them for what they are as a sound, as if you've never heard that sound previously. Try not to give the sound a label.
🧘🏽♀️ Thoughts will inevitably bubble up. They may be mundane, or they may have an emotion of some kind attached to them. You may find yourself judging yourself. This momentary feeling is normal and natural. Become quietly aware of this thinking.
🧘🏽♀️ Take a full calm breath of slow self compassion—after all, as many seasoned practitioners say, this is a good sign: noticing a thought in 'the now' is proof of being in the now!
🧘🏽♀️ Quietly, and even lovingly, acknowledge your wandering mind and guide it back to the current moment, softly refocusing on your breathing.How to let go of thoughts
How do I let go of my thoughts?
The biggest challenge many people face in their mindfulness practice is remaining in the present moment, and particularly in having techniques to manage thoughts that arise. The secret of many long-time mindfulness meditators is visualisation. By having some reliable mental images ready to help you gently release those thoughts it’s often much easier to return to the present moment.
Here's some imagery worth trying when your mind drifts from 'the now':
Picture your thoughts as bubbles in gently boiling water, rising to the surface and softly disappearing.
Imagine your thoughts as clouds drifting across the clear sky of your mind, neither pushed away nor held onto.
Visualise each thought as a leaf that you place on a slow-moving river, watching it float downstream and out of sight.
Road-trippers might see thoughts as scenery passing by, gradually fading into the distance in the rear-view mirror.
Whichever approach you choose, be patient with yourself: Some days will be easier than others, and that’s perfectly okay!
Important: If mindfulness meditation brings up difficult or distressing feelings, pause your practice and seek professional medical advice. Your personal wellbeing comes first.
Three roadmaps to choose from
The choice is yours. Choose one of these roadmaps and settle on a daily path. Or you can mix them up according to how much time you have. You might like to start with the Express Route and work your way up to Premium Passport via a Classic Tour, as you build your mindfulness mastery:
🚗 The Classic Tour: 15 Minutes of Mindfulness
🚗 The Express Route: 3 Minutes of Mindfulness
🚗 Premium Passport: 30-45 Minutes of Mindfulness
Take mindfulness from a 5-Star to 6-Star Destination by adding social interaction into the mix.
Thrive Together sits at True North on the Road Tripper’s Age-Well Compass on account of its irrefutable power to impact vibrant healthy ageing.
Here are 10 ideas to get you started:
🤗 Mindful Walking Partners
Schedule a weekly walk with a friend where you start with 15 minutes of quiet mindful walking, then share reflections while continuing your stroll.
🤗 Virtual Zen Zoom
Create a small online group that meets for 15 minutes of guided meditation, followed by a brief check-in and intention setting for the week.
🤗 Tea & Tranquility Circles
Host a monthly gathering where friends practice mindfulness together then enjoy mindful tea drinking and conversation.
🤗 Gratitude Buddy System
Pair up with a friend for daily text exchanges of three mindful observations or gratitudes from your practice.
🤗 Garden & Grow
Form a small group that practices mindfulness in someone's garden, followed by shared gardening time or nature appreciation.
🤗 Mindful Book Club
Start each book club meeting with a group meditation before diving into discussion, connecting mind and social engagement.
🤗 Generation Bridge
Why not pass on a gift of mindfulness to young children, teaching them simple techniques (like mindful cloud watching or nature listening)?
🤗 Crafting Circle
Combine mindfulness with creative activities in a group setting - start with 15-minute mindfulness, then move into quiet, focused crafting together.
🤗 Mindful Mondays @ Work
Transform Monday’s pre-meeting scramble into a moment of shared calm with a 3-5 minute mindfulness check-in. It could be as simple as three deep breaths together or a quick body scan.
🤗 Team Calm Campaign
Create some friendly workplace joy by sharing your mindfulness practice progress, tracking length and consistency by team member or department.
Excellent post, I can see it inspiring many to explore mindfulness, and that’s a great thing in my view.
Love that it’s the year of JOY! A practice that I teach in my journaling classes is a roadmap to joy - using specific tools and techniques. This is a favorite lesson - where the participants really dive deep into the metaphor.