Here are 5 Ways to Reduce Cortisol, Heart Rate, and Stress in 5 Minutes or Less

When stress spikes, your body is often already ahead of your thoughts. Cortisol rises, your heart rate increases, and it can feel like everything is happening all at once.

The goal in these moments isn’t to “fix” yourself — it’s to help your nervous system settle.

Start by choosing just one of the techniques below and try it for about a minute. If it doesn’t land right away, gently move on to another. Over time, you’ll begin to notice which approaches work best for you. With practice, your body learns how to return to calm more quickly, and those intense stress responses start to soften. You can use these during major life changes too. 

Let’s begin with the most accessible tools.


1. Start with the Body (Physical Actions)

Physical grounding is especially helpful for anyone who finds visualization difficult or experiences aphantasia. You don’t need to imagine anything — you simply move, feel, and notice.

Try one of these:

  • Gently press your feet into the floor
  • Stretch your hands and fingers slowly
  • Place a hand on your chest or belly and notice your breath
  • Rock side to side or sway slightly

These small movements send a clear signal to your nervous system: I am here, and I am safe.

Learn more grounding techniques.


2. Engage the Five Senses

Bringing awareness to your senses helps pull your attention out of the stress loop and back into the present moment.

Name or notice:

  • 5 things you can see
  • 4 things you can feel
  • 3 things you can hear
  • 2 things you can smell
  • 1 thing you can taste

There’s no need to rush this. Let your senses gently anchor you. Coloring is another way to bring you into your senses. Learn more about why color and creativity regulate emotions here. 


3. Change the Temperature

A quick temperature shift can interrupt a stress response almost immediately.

Options include:

Temperature changes work directly with your body’s survival systems — simple, fast, and effective.


4. Low-Impact, Repetitive Movement (with Sensory Input)

Movement helps metabolize stress hormones, especially when paired with sensory awareness.

Try:

Repetition is calming. Let the rhythm do the work.


5. Visual or Mental Anchors

If visualization works for you, these can be deeply soothing.

Some gentle anchors include:

  • Imagining a tree — rooted, steady, and supported
  • Visualizing a rope or tether that keeps you grounded
  • Returning to a happy or safe place, real or imagined

If images don’t come easily, even thinking about the idea of steadiness or safety can be enough.


A Note on Distraction and Creative Outlets

Sometimes the fastest way to calm your system is through intentional distraction — stepping away from the source of stress.

Creative outlets can be especially supportive:

  • Knitting or crocheting
  • Drawing or coloring
  • Writing or journaling
  • Gentle crafting

The key is intentional limits. One episode of a show can help regulate your nervous system; binge-watching season after season may create a new form of overwhelm. Let the distraction support you — not replace one stress with another.


After Calm Returns

Once your body has settled, you may find space to reflect.

From a calmer place, you can gently explore:

  • What triggered the spike in stress
  • Whether the response feels current or tied to something older
  • What emotional connections might still be holding tension

This isn’t about judgment — it’s about understanding. When emotional ties loosen, your nervous system learns it no longer needs to respond with urgency.


Be Gentle With Yourself

Stress responses aren’t failures — they’re signals. Each time you respond with care instead of criticism, you build trust with your body.

Note on this list but a bonus mention, quick gratitude practices, are golden when it comes to unwinding in a big way. 

Small moments of regulation add up. And five minutes really can make a difference.

📖 If This Resonated, You Might Also Like:

Grounding Yourself

Comprehensive grounding guide

Coping With Major Life Changes

For when stress feels overwhelming

Anxiety

Understanding anxiety triggers and responses

Where would you like to go next?

Continue your journey toward a more joyful, creative life.