Shaltazar Pause Transmission When Anxiety Takes Hold Greetings dear ones,
We are Shaltazar,
The Gavishpaninu,
The Energy of Thirty-Three,
The Master Teacher,
And the Energy of Forty-Four,
The Master Healer.
Anxiety often does not arrive as a single thought or a clear fear.
It arrives as a state,
A tightening in the chest,
A restlessness in the body,
A sense that something is wrong,
Even when you cannot name what it is.
It can feel like your inner world is constantly scanning the horizon,
Searching for what might go wrong next.
The mind runs ahead of the moment,
The body follows with a shallow breath,
Quickened heart,
And a readiness to react.
You may find yourself living ahead of the present moment,
Already bracing for what has not yet happened,
Bracing for a future that has not yet arrived.
Dear ones,
Much of the anxiety moving through your world now is born from acceleration.
Information moves faster than your nervous systems were ever designed to hold.
News,
Messages,
Demands and expectations arrive without pause,
Without space,
Without rhythm.
Over time,
The body forgets how to rest in the present and learns instead how to stay on alert.
But anxiety is not a personal failure,
It is a signal.
It is the body and mind saying,
I have been carrying too much for too long without a place to set it down.
The pause offers you that place,
Not as an escape from what you are feeling,
But as a gentle return to the ground beneath you,
Where breath,
Body and presence remind you that you do not have to carry the whole future in this single moment.
When you pause,
You step out of the race to manage what might happen and return to what is happening.
You bring your awareness back into your breath,
Not to change it,
Not to control it,
Simply to feel it.
You notice the rise and fall of your chest,
The weight of your body where it is supported,
The quiet sensations that remind you that you are here,
Now,
In this moment,
And that in this moment,
You are still breathing.
This simple return begins to tell your nervous system a different story.
It tells it that it does not need to solve the future in order to be safe in the present.
In the pause,
You may begin to notice how many of your anxious thoughts are not about what is happening,
But about what could happen,
About what might be lost,
What might fail,
What might go wrong.
The pause does not argue with these thoughts.
It does not try to make them disappear.
It gently brings you back into the present moment,
Where life is actually being lived.
From here,
Anxiety often begins to soften,
Not because the world has become certain,
But because you have returned to something more stable than certainty.
You have returned to presence.
There is a quiet strength in this return.
It does not come from having all the answers.
It comes from remembering that you can meet each moment as it arrives,
Rather than trying to survive them all at once.
Dear ones,
You are not meant to carry tomorrow,
Next month,
And next year in a single breath.
You were meant to live this one,
Then the next,
Then the next.
The pause restores this natural rhythm.
It shifts the energy from urgency to depth,
From vigilance to listening,
From bracing to allowing.
And in this shift,
Something subtle begins to happen.
You may find that clarity arises more easily,
That choices feel less desperate,
That the world feels a little less like a threat,
And a little more like a conversation you are allowed to be part of.
Anxiety does not need to be defeated.
It needs to be met.
It needs to be given space to settle back into the body,
Back into breath,
Back into the living moment where it no longer has to guard the entire future alone.
Simply take a deep breath and return to the pause.