GUIDES BY INTENT
Practices matched to what's actually going on.
Meditation categories like 'mindfulness' or 'breathwork' don't tell you what to do at 9 PM on a bad Tuesday. These guides do — grounded in the research on what actually helps the specific nervous-system state you're in.
Updated April 2026·3 min read
Core four
The four highest-volume intents get extended, image-rich treatment:
- Anxiety — Short, breath-led practices that don't make anxiety worse. The common meditation mistakes to avoid.
- Sleep — Sleep-optimized meditation and breathing — why bedtime practice is different from daytime practice.
- Focus — Deep-work warmups grounded in MBSR noting practice. Attention training that actually transfers.
- Stress — Research-backed stress regulation: the autonomic tools that work, the productivity framings that don't.
Specific situations
The rest of the library covers situations with smaller search volume but higher personal stakes — if you're looking for one of these, it's usually because you really need it.
- Burnout — Burnout is a state of prolonged nervous-system dysregulation, not laziness.
- Grief — Grief meditation is not about moving on — it's about having company in the hardest moments.
- Overwhelm — Overwhelm-specific meditation has to meet the state: short, directive, and body-first.
- ADHD — Most meditation advice is written for neurotypical attention.
- Beginners — Beginner meditation fails most often not from lack of discipline but from bad expectations.
- Teens — Teen-brain research shows adolescent nervous systems are specifically adapted for high variability, social sensitivity, and reward-seeking.
Or — let Loam pick
If you don't want to choose, use The Moment. Type a sentence about what's actually happening — “I'm overwhelmed and can't sleep” — and Loam picks the research-backed practice for that state.