Intention

Grounding

Grounding is the practice of returning to the body and the present moment — the counterweight to a mind that drifts upward and away.

Grounding is the practice of returning — to the body, to the breath, to the floor beneath the feet. The tradition holds that the mind does what minds do: it goes upward, into tomorrow's list, last week's conversation, the argument you didn't win. Grounding is the counterweight.

The oldest methods are physical: hands in soil, bare feet on grass, cold water on the wrists. Stone traditions work alongside these — not replacing the body, but marking territory. Hematite, named for the Greek word for blood, is dark and dense, its weight reassuring in the palm. Smoky quartz carries a muted warmth. Black tourmaline's long striations catch light differently depending on how you hold it. Red jasper has the texture of desert sandstone.

The practice the tradition suggests is simple. Hold the stone. Feel its weight. Press both feet flat to the floor. Breathe, and let the attention settle.

Earth-smell is grounding's other register. Vetiver, cedarwood, patchouli — these are the scents that anchor rather than lift. They belong to the mornings when the list is already long, and to the evenings when the mind keeps working after the work is done. Light one and let it mark the shift: here, attention comes back down.

Below — our catalogue's gathering for this practice: stones heavy enough to keep the intention in view, earthy scents for the desk or the bedside, and the objects that ask nothing except that you return to them.

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