
Why your own inner steadiness is one of the most supportive things you can offer
“Calm is contagious.”
It’s a phrase that originally came from the US Navy SEALs, not somewhere you might typically expect to find a mindfulness insight. But it’s a phrase that has stayed with me, because it points to something I see again and again in the people I teach: when one person in a relationship finds genuine steadiness, something shifts for everyone around them.
This isn’t just poetic. It’s neuroscience. Human beings are wired to co-regulate, our nervous systems unconsciously reading the emotional signals of the people close to us and responding in kind. When we sense calm, we settle. When we sense threat, we brace. The amygdala, the brain’s alarm system, is highly sensitive to the emotional state of others. A regulated nervous system in the room creates the conditions for other nervous systems to regulate too.
As the Vietnamese Buddhist teacher Thich Nhat Hanh wrote:
“If in our daily life we can smile, if we can be peaceful and happy, not only we, but everyone will profit from it.“
He was pointing to the same truth from a very different direction.
Why This Matters for Carers
For those of us who care for others, this lands with particular weight.
Caring takes many forms. You might be supporting an ageing parent, a partner living with illness, a child with additional needs, or simply someone you love through a hard chapter. Whatever form it takes, so much of the energy of caring flows outward, tracking someone else’s needs, managing the unpredictable, absorbing difficult emotions, showing up again and again. The idea that tending to your own inner steadiness might be one of the most genuinely useful things you can do for the person you care for can feel almost counterintuitive. Surely there’s something more active, more practical, more doing that would help more?
But this is what keeps showing up. I’ve just finished teaching the latest cohort of The Mindful Life programme, a six-week mindfulness course designed specifically for older aged carers. One of the things that landed most deeply across those six weeks was how finding our own equilibrium, amidst all the challenge of caring, could make a real difference.
Many participants noticed it in the daily rhythm of caring, in the small repeated moments, giving medication calmly, offering reassurance to those they were caring for when they were agitated, being present without bracing. They hadn’t set out to change those interactions. But as their own steadiness gradually grew, so did the quality of those ordinary moments.
A Resource to Draw From
What the practices offer, slowly and quietly, is a kind of inner resource to draw from. Caring is unpredictable, and some days will simply be harder than others, no matter how much we practise. But when there is something more anchored underneath, a little more ground beneath your feet, you can meet whatever comes with slightly less reactivity. The pause before the response. The breath before the reply. Small things that change the momentum of the moment.
Calm, it turns out, really is contagious. And so is its absence. Most of us who care for someone will recognise the other direction too, the moment when our own anxiety or exhaustion shows up and before we’ve even said a word, our agitation has somehow become theirs. It’s not something to feel guilty about. It’s just how human nervous systems work.
Maybe you’ve noticed this yourself, a difficult morning that snowballs and seems to colour the whole day, or a moment when you did manage to stay more balanced and something shifted, almost imperceptibly, in the person you were caring for.
The Beginning of the Practice
That noticing is actually the beginning of the practice. And it’s worth saying that this isn’t about forcing calm or covering over what’s real. It isn’t about pretending to be calm when you’re running on empty. The practice is quieter than that, noticing the agitation when it arises, not fighting it or judging yourself for it, but working gently with the breath and the body to allow it to ease. Sometimes it does. Sometimes it doesn’t. But something shifts when we stop fighting what’s already here.
The question mindfulness keeps returning to is not whether you can be calm, but whether you can be present, and in that presence, find just a little more choice.
Taking It Further
The next cohort of The Mindful Life Mindfulness for Older Adult Carers is coming up soon. It’s held entirely online, so you can join from wherever you are. If you’re an older adult carer and you’re curious about what mindfulness might offer you, you can find out more and register your interest here.
And if you’d like a taste of mindfulness practices first, my Thursday evening drop-in is always open, 6.15pm, online or in person in Barnet. No experience needed. Everyone welcome.
Get in touch at ruth@pathwaytocalm.com.
Ruth McDonald is a BAMBA-registered mindfulness teacher. She teaches a weekly drop-in session and works with individuals and groups in London and online.





