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Calm is not something you either have or you do not. It is something you can practise - and the best time to practise is before life forces the test. Calm Is a Skill: Train Your Nervous System Like a Muscle gives you a practical way to understand stress in your body and interrupt it earlier, with small actions that work in real situations: meetings, commutes, family friction, deadlines, and the restless hour before sleep.
Anaya Korvelle shows how nervous system regulation becomes easier when you stop relying on willpower and start building repeatable reps. You will learn to recognise stress signals, use breathing exercises that fit into ordinary moments, and apply grounding techniques when your thoughts are racing. With trigger mapping, you will identify what reliably sets you off and plan for the first 60 seconds, when a small shift can change what happens next. You will also build sleep support habits and recovery routines that make calm more available tomorrow, not just today.
This book is for readers who want stress management tools that are clear, realistic, and adaptable - including people navigating workplace stress relief needs without becoming flat or detached. By the end, you will have a personalised daily calm practice, stronger emotional regulation, and a calmer relationship with setbacks: not as evidence of failure, but as part of training.

Calm Is a Skill

SKU: 9789376557448
$23.99 Regular Price
$19.10Sale Price
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  • Anaya Korvelle writes about calm as something earned through practice rather than wished for in crisis. Her work is shaped by years of noticing how stress hides in ordinary places: the moment before you open your inbox, the tightness that arrives with a certain tone of voice, the way sleep debt makes everything feel personal. She is drawn to tools that respect real constraints - busy homes, demanding jobs, messy relationships - and she favours methods that can be used quietly, without special equipment or perfect conditions. Korvelle approaches regulation as both practical and humane. She is interested in the point where inner life meets daily behaviour: how language changes arguments, how small body cues change big decisions, and how recovery can be planned instead of postponed. Her perspective carries a subtle historical thread: a respect for older, plain traditions of steadiness - the kind found in handwritten journals, evening walks, and communities that understood the value of rhythm and rest long before constant connectivity. She writes to help readers build a personal operating manual for pressure, so that calm becomes less of a rare mood and more of a repeatable skill.

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