One Minute World • Presence Practice • Theologic Method
Short Attention Senses

One Minute World

A 60-second practice of purely sensory contact. No thoughts allowed to become conclusions. Just sound, light, texture, breath.

How it works

~60 seconds
  • Name five sensory signals without interpretation.
  • Let thoughts pass without chasing them.
  • End abruptly (on purpose).

This isn’t mindfulness as “calm down.” It’s a tiny, disciplined refusal to turn perception into a story. If you “fail” and interpret something, that’s normal—just return to raw signal.

Signal examples (choose any five)

Keep them concrete. Not “nice,” “annoying,” or “dangerous.” Just data.

  • Sound: a hum, a click, distant voices, airflow, a bird.
  • Sight: brightness, shadow edge, color patch, movement, shape.
  • Touch: fabric pressure, temperature, pulse, jaw tension, foot contact.
  • Smell/taste: coffee trace, soap, dryness, mint, neutral air.
  • Breath: cool in, warm out, rise/fall, pause, throat texture.

Common traps (totally fine)

These are the “story engines.” Notice them… then let them keep walking.

  • Labeling: “good / bad / annoying / relaxing.”
  • Meaning-making: “This proves I’m stressed.”
  • Fixing: “I should change my posture/breath.”
  • Explaining: “That sound is the AC because…”
  • Drift: you wake up inside a thought-loop.

The abrupt ending (why)

Ending mid-stream interrupts the mind’s desire to “wrap it up.” The point is to practice contact without closure—then return to life without a moral.

Copy & paste prompt

Tip: On desktop, you can click inside the box and press Cmd/Ctrl + A, then Cmd/Ctrl + C. Or use the buttons.

Presence Practices • TheologicMethod.com
Use this as a micro-reset between tasks, before reading, or right before replying to a message you’re emotionally “writing in your head.”
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