Take a small inhale through the nose, then a second, shorter sip to fully inflate the lungs. Exhale slowly through the mouth until empty. Repeat three times. This pattern offloads carbon dioxide efficiently and quiets urgency, helping you greet the next conversation with grounded presence.
Stand, roll shoulders back, and open the chest. Reach arms overhead, then hinge at hips to lengthen hamstrings. Circle ankles and wrists. Thirty to sixty seconds of gentle range-of-motion wakes circulation without sweating, preventing the heavy slump that arrives when meetings stack without movement.
Write a single sentence capturing what matters in the next block of work, or the question you must ask in the upcoming call. Externalizing intention trims mental clutter, reduces switching cost, and creates a satisfying checkpoint you can revisit when energy dips later.
Walk slightly slower than your habit, matching steps to a calm four-beat breathing cadence. Inhale across two steps, exhale across two. This pairing automates pacing, prevents rushed entrances, and signals your nervous system that you are safe enough to think clearly.
While waiting, rest eyes on a distant point, relax your jaw, and let shoulders descend. Drop your exhale a little longer than usual. In sixty seconds, busy chatter quiets, and you step out of the elevator less flooded by previous conversations.