Thursday, September 25, 2025

Top 5 This Week

Related Posts

So What Is Grounding? And Why Science Says It Actually Works

Whether you are an entrepreneur, a creative or even if you work for a corporation there are times we all reach our peak with stress and even anxiety. But it doesn’t have to get to that point. Grounding: The Rock, the Reset, and the Real-World Science

My youngest brother Daryl—sharp as a razor with this stuff—recently put me on to grounding. When he says “check it out,” I listen. And it jogged a memory. I remember that scene in The Secret—the guy with the rock. He called it his “gratitude rock.” Just a smooth stone in his pocket. Every time he touched it, he’d think of something he was grateful for. People noticed, wanted one, and he ended up selling them. A driveway rock turned into a business.

He didn’t know it then, but he was practicing what psychologists now call grounding: pulling yourself back into the present when your mind tries to sprint into panic, flashbacks, or worst-case fantasies. No incense. No guru. Just an anchor.

Why Grounding Works

When anxiety spikes, your body hits fight-or-flight—heart racing, breath shallow, thoughts lying to you about danger. Grounding is the emergency brake. Touch a rock. Grip the chair. Name five things you can see. It interrupts the storm and locks you into now.

  • Nervous system reset: Sensory focus and slow breathing cue calm.
  • Trauma-informed: Therapists teach it to manage flashbacks and dissociation.
  • Brain mechanics: It recruits the thinking brain and quiets the fear center.

How People Actually Ground (Real Examples)

Musician backstage: Runs the 5-4-3-2-1 drill—five things to see, four to feel, three to hear, two to smell, one to taste—then walks out steady instead of scattered.

Exec before the meeting: Feet flat, hands on the table, silent facts: “It’s Tuesday. I’m in New York. I’m running this room.” Adrenaline meets reality.

Student mid-panic: Ice cube in hand. Focus only on the cold. The spiral breaks.

Parent at night: Barefoot walk on the grass after bedtime. Body resets; mind follows.

Objects, Sheets, and Simple Anchors

The rock wasn’t magic. The meaning was. Coins, keys, bracelets—anything you assign purpose can be your anchor. Some folks go further with sleep tools like Grounding Sheets to keep a steady baseline overnight. Use what actually helps—no need to complicate it.

The Electrical Connection

Think outlets. That third prong is the ground. When there’s a surge, energy needs a safe path or the system fries. Same idea with your nervous system. Anxiety dumps voltage; you need a discharge route. That’s what grounding provides: a reliable path back to steady.

Bottom Line

You don’t need a new personality. You need an anchor. Could be a rock in your pocket, a breath you can count on, or Grounding Sheets on your bed. That’s grounding—practical, fast, and built to keep your system from frying when life throws a surge.

Some people stand barefoot in the grass and hold a tree but with people and their dogs in LA I might step into a hot pile of Dog S*it with my bare feet and grounding would graduate to VOMITing. So unless I KNOW the grass is well cared for, I’ll put that on the back burner.

Kevin Ross
Kevin Rosshttps://blogwallet.com
Kevin "KevRoss" Ross is a music and radio industry expert. He is a 20 -plus year entrepreneur with the leading most successful industry trade publication and site Radio Facts (www.radiofacts.com). He has also published various books, magazines, performed marketing and promotions for major corporations and recording artists and he is on the advisory board of several industry organizations. This year Ross introduced his non profit organization LOMARI (Leaders of the Music and Recording Industry) to help teach young minority students how to market and manage their music and products.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Popular Articles