There was no commute today.
No walk to the station.
No drive home.
No moment of crossing a threshold that told your nervous system,
Clearly and unmistakably,
That work was over.
And the rest of your life had begun.
For most of human history.
Leaving work meant physically leaving.
The body moved through space.
The environment changed.
And somewhere between the office door and the front door.
The brain began to let go.
When you work from home,
That transition never happens.
The laptop closes and you are.
Still there.
In the same room.
Possibly the same chair.
The same walls that watched you work are now watching you try not to.
Research on remote work confirms what most home workers already feel in their bodies.
Without a commute or clear start and stop cues,
Work often creeps into every corner of the day.
The nervous system stays partially activated.
Waiting for the next thing.
Unable to fully believe the day is done.
This 10 minutes is your commute.
Not a physical one.
A psychological one.
By the end of it,
The boundary will exist.
Your nervous system will know the difference between now and the working day.
Find a comfortable position.
And close your eyes.
We are going to begin with something deliberate and symbolic.
Because the nervous system needs to register closure.
A simple conscious acknowledgement that this part of the day is complete.
Is enough to allow the brain to begin shifting out of work mode.
So I want you to take a slow breath in.
And as you breathe out.
Say silently to yourself.
Work is done.
Again.
Breathe in.
.
.
And out.
Work is done.
One more time.
In.
And out.
Work is done.
Now imagine for a moment that every task still on your list,
Every unfinished email,
Everything you meant to do today.
That did not get done.
Imagine placing it all in a box.
Not throwing it away.
Not ignoring it.
Simply placing it carefully inside.
Closing the lid,
And setting it down somewhere you can find it tomorrow.
It will still be there.
It will wait for you.
But it does not need to come with you into the evening.
The box is closed.
The day is behind you now.
Now,
We are going to use your breath.
To physically cross from one state to another.
Into another.
According to polyvagal theory,
Creating a genuine sense of safety in the body is what allows the nervous system to shift out of the alert,
Ready for anything state that work demands.
The breath is the fastest way to create that shift.
Breathe in slowly through your nose for four counts.
One,
Two,
Three,
Four.
Hold for 2.
1.
2.
And out through your mouth for six.
Long and slow.
2.
3.
.
.
4.
.
.
5.
.
.
6.
.
.
Again.
In One,
Two,
Three,
Four.
Hold.
One.
2 and out.
All the way.
Four,
Five,
Six.
Once more.
In.
2.
3.
For.
Hold.
One.
2.
And out.
1,
2,
3,
4.
5.
6 You have just crossed the threshold.
On the other side of that breath.
Work waits.
On this side.
The evening begins.
A quick sweep through your body now.
Not a long scan.
Just a check-in.
And a letting go.
Your shoulders.
Drop them.
Completely.
Remote workers often carry their shoulders elevated all day without realizing it.
A subtle physical brace against the next notification,
The next demand.
Let them fall now,
As far as they can go.
Your jaw and face.
Soften everything.
The concentration lines,
A slight frown of focus.
The tension around your eyes from the screen.
All of it.
Gone.
Your hands.
Open them.
Palms Up.
You are not holding anything right now.
Not a phone,
Not a problem,
Not a to-do list.
Just open hands.
Your chest.
Let it expand with one deep breath in.
And as you breathe out.
Feel it soften and release.
Your whole body now.
From your head to your feet.
Heavy.
Still,
Off the clock.
You have done something most remote workers never do.
You have deliberately ended the day.
Not just close to the laptop.
Not just moved to another room.
But truly.
Consciously drawn a line between the person who worked today and the person who gets to rest tonight.
Those are two different people.
And they deserve two different states.
Whatever the evening holds for you,
Let it be separate from what the day held.
You brought your best to your work.
Now bring your presence to the rest.
The commute is complete.
The evening is yours.