Have not been able to read all of these
@hodge but meditation and mindfulness is hard. For PTSDers, slowing down at all can be threatening. I slow down in a long process.
Sharing an mp3 from Alexander Technique. It's not too complicated. Don't worry if it doesn't make 100% sense. Just try laying down with your head supported, and just listen. Can you do that much?
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Right now this is as close as I get to mindfulness. It's guided. I'm slowing down. I can notice my body but not a load of internal sensations. I can notice my breath, but not for too long. Maybe that talk-through will help you, maybe not. I use it daily, but I've done a little Alexander Technique.
Other times I need a process of slowing down into mindfulness. EX: walk my dog. Then yoga or piliates or qi gong. Then lay down or stretch. Then lay down with a guided meditation....or a scripted metta (Loving Kindness) meditation.
Don't beat yourself up for it. It's HARD. The trick is to find your way in, whether through gradually slowing down or finding a mindfulness activity that works for you....then repeat it daily. It will transfer to other activities, but not all at once. If you find something that works for you, just keep doing it.
I go to my Alexander Technique "Active Rest" when overwhelmed....it lets me shut down. The Talk-through mp3 helps my mind be quiet and listen. I can reconnect to my body and the present in safe ways. But it took my a long time to find anything that felt right for me. So, you aren't failing....you just need to keep searching. So many routes to mindfulness. And if one rings true for you a bit, just commit to it....every day....and be patient as the change will happen in beautifully subtle ways.