
GIVE THE PERFECT GIFT
Erin Mills Town Centre Gift Cards are the perfect choice for your gift giving needs.Purchase gift cards at kiosks near the food court or centre court, at Guest Services, or click below to purchase online.PURCHASE HEREHome
Belonging to the Quiet: Relieving Stress via Simple Screen Free Relaxation
Indigo
Loading Inventory...
Belonging to the Quiet: Relieving Stress via Simple Screen Free Relaxation
By None
Current price: $15.99


By None
Belonging to the Quiet: Relieving Stress via Simple Screen Free Relaxation
Current price: $15.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Something quietly shifts when the screen goes dark. The noise that had become background — the notifications, the scrolling, the low hum of digital demands — begins to soften. And in that space, the body remembers what it already knew: that rest is not found in stimulation, but in its absence. This book explores the tender art of stepping away — not as an act of deprivation, but as a gentle return to the self. It invites readers to rediscover the simple, unhurried practices that have always held the capacity to soothe: a warm cup held in both hands, a slow breath taken without agenda, a walk without a destination or a device. Research consistently shows that analog, low-stimulation activities — journaling, gentle movement, time in nature, mindful breathing — reduce cognitive fatigue and support emotional well-being in ways that screen-based rest simply cannot replicate. Yet this book does not present these findings as instructions. It offers them as permission. It explores how screen-free time is not empty time — it is full time, rich with sensation, presence, and the kind of quiet that the nervous system genuinely craves. For those who have felt simultaneously overstimulated and under-rested, these pages offer a softer way of unwinding — one that asks very little, and returns a great deal.
Something quietly shifts when the screen goes dark. The noise that had become background — the notifications, the scrolling, the low hum of digital demands — begins to soften. And in that space, the body remembers what it already knew: that rest is not found in stimulation, but in its absence. This book explores the tender art of stepping away — not as an act of deprivation, but as a gentle return to the self. It invites readers to rediscover the simple, unhurried practices that have always held the capacity to soothe: a warm cup held in both hands, a slow breath taken without agenda, a walk without a destination or a device. Research consistently shows that analog, low-stimulation activities — journaling, gentle movement, time in nature, mindful breathing — reduce cognitive fatigue and support emotional well-being in ways that screen-based rest simply cannot replicate. Yet this book does not present these findings as instructions. It offers them as permission. It explores how screen-free time is not empty time — it is full time, rich with sensation, presence, and the kind of quiet that the nervous system genuinely craves. For those who have felt simultaneously overstimulated and under-rested, these pages offer a softer way of unwinding — one that asks very little, and returns a great deal.


















