Calm Tools Quiz
Which Calm Tool Do You Need Right Now?
Answer a few gentle questions and let Eriadne match you with one small practice — a whisper, a somatic anchor, or a mind reset — that fits where you are right now.
Your Calm Tool
The Gentle Return
A soft way to come back to yourself when part of you has drifted away.
Right now, your system is asking for presence more than answers. The Gentle Return helps you feel a little more “here” without demanding that you be fully okay.
Sit or lie in whatever position is tolerable. Close your eyes for a breath or two. Let your awareness fall toward the weight of your body — however it rests. Then say quietly, inside:
“I am returning to myself.”
Not as a command, but as a soft possibility. You are allowed to come back slowly, one breath at a time.
You can also visit the full Calm Tools page to see this and other practices written out.
Your Calm Tool
The Soften-and-See
A gentle way to un-brace when everything feels tight or pressured.
Your body feels braced, as if it has been quietly holding everything up. The Soften-and-See gives you permission to loosen your stance, just a little.
Let your shoulders fall an inch — not down, but outward. Let the breath that follows be unremarkable. Then ask quietly:
“What is the softest part of me right now?”
Even if the answer is small — a fingertip, a memory, a thought — lean toward it like a warm doorway. Rest your attention there for a few breaths.
You can read this practice in full on the Calm Tools page.
Your Calm Tool
The 3-Point Anchor
A body-based anchor for sudden overwhelm and racing sensations.
Your system feels activated — alert, buzzing, or too full. The 3-Point Anchor asks your body to locate itself again.
Place one hand on your chest. Place the other hand on your thigh. Notice the ground beneath your feet.
Hold all three points at once. Let your breath move somewhere between them and say quietly inside:
“I am here. I am held. I am in my body.”
Stay for 10–20 seconds. Nothing dramatic has to happen. Even a small settling is meaningful.
You can return to this any time you feel suddenly overwhelmed. The full instructions live on the Calm Tools page.
Your Calm Tool
The Long Exhale Reset
A nervous system downshift for anxiety spikes and adrenaline surges.
Your body is asking for a clear signal that it can slow down. The Long Exhale Reset speaks directly to your nervous system.
Inhale gently for 3 seconds. Exhale slowly for 6 seconds. Repeat this rhythm four times.
Long exhale = automatic downshift. Your vagus nerve interprets this as: “The danger has passed enough for me to breathe this way.”
Let this be small and simple. You are not trying to be perfect — only to offer your body a different pattern.
You can keep this tool with you for any sudden surge. The written version appears on the Calm Tools page.
Your Calm Tool
Name the Weather
A way to describe what you feel without turning it into a verdict about you.
Your inner world feels foggy, heavy, or hard to explain. Name the Weather lets you describe it without blaming yourself for it.
Ask yourself: “What is the weather inside me right now?”
Examples: foggy, stormy, tense, drifting, heavy, overbright.
Weather changes. So will this. You are not your weather — you are the one noticing it.
If this resonates, the fuller version lives on the Calm Tools page.
Your Calm Tool
The One Gentle Fact
A single true sentence to hold onto when your mind spirals.
Your thoughts are reaching for every worst-case possibility at once. The One Gentle Fact helps you hold onto one small truth instead.
Ask yourself: “What is one gentle fact I know right now?”
Examples:
- “I am safe enough in this moment.”
- “My body is trying to help me.”
- “The night is quieter than my thoughts.”
- “I don’t have to solve anything right now.”
One true, gentle fact interrupts the cascade. Your mind doesn’t have to approve of it — only to notice that it is still real.
You can copy your sentence somewhere visible. The full written practice is on the Calm Tools page.
You can return to this quiz whenever you like. Your result may change as your inner weather changes.