The Warrior Mindset Podcast

Is Your Mind a Browser With 100 Tabs Open? Here’s How to Find Your Center.


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Do you ever feel that your mind is constantly racing, jumping from one task to the next, one worry to another? It’s a feeling many of us know well. In our overstimulated world, our minds can feel like a web browser with a hundred tabs open at once, constantly reacting, scrolling, and judging. Finding a way to quiet the noise and slow down can feel like the most profound gift you can give yourself.

But what if you’re not someone who can easily sit in silent meditation?

I recently had a conversation with architect and artist Seema Chandane, who shared a beautiful and accessible practice for finding calm: Mandala Mindful Meditation. It’s a creative process that serves as a powerful tool for grounding yourself, and the best part is, you don’t need to be an “artist” to do it.

What is Mandala Art Meditation?

At its core, a mandala is a geometric design that starts from a central point and expands outward in concentric, repetitive patterns. While mandalas have deep roots in different cultures for meditative purposes , Seema’s approach focuses on the simple, modern act of drawing or coloring as a form of mindfulness.

The process is straightforward: you begin at the center and create repetitive patterns, or simply color within a pre-drawn design. This simple action has a profound effect. “What that does is it kind of slows your nervous system down,” Seema explains.

Overcoming the “I’m Not Creative” Barrier

One of the biggest hurdles people face is the belief that they aren’t creative enough. Seema hears this all the time. Our society often measures creativity by perfection—the perfect Instagram post, the flawless project outcome.

This practice invites you to redefine creativity. “Here, creativity is playfulness. Here, it’s about the flow,” Seema says. The goal isn’t to produce a masterpiece; it’s to silence the inner critic that judges whether your lines are symmetrical or your colors are “right”. The focus is on rewarding the process, not just the outcome. There are no rules and no pressure.

Finding Flow: Meditation in Motion

As you engage with the patterns and colors, something remarkable happens. The initial mental chatter begins to fade. The rhythm of repeating patterns and the simple act of filling space with color soothes your nervous system. Your breath falls into sync with your hand’s movements, and you enter a meditative state of flow.

“The time will seem like it’s dissolving,” Seema notes, “And you won’t know where that 40 minutes passed away”. This is where the magic lies—in that quiet, decluttered mental space where you can find deep answers.

A Practice for Life

The most beautiful metaphor Seema shared is how this practice translates from paper into daily life. Every mandala begins with a center, just as we have a center in our own lives. When we feel scattered and unbalanced, it’s often because we’ve lost touch with that center.

This practice teaches you how to find that central point on the page and, by extension, within yourself. It’s a way to learn how to pause, ground yourself, and operate from a place of calm stability, even amidst chaos.

If you’re looking for a way to close some of those mental tabs and create space for yourself, this might be the gentle, creative invitation you’ve been waiting for.

You can experience this practice for yourself. Seema Chandane is facilitating Mandala Art Meditation sessions as a part of our Align membership program. To join her and our other facilitators, click the link below:

Join Align and Start Your Mandala Practice



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