Mindfulness for ADHD and Restless Minds:
Calm Without Sitting Still
Author: Alex Guru | Reading time: 6 minutes

You've been told: «To calm down, sit in lotus pose, close your eyes, and follow your breath for 20 minutes». But for you, that sounds like torture. Within 30 seconds your nose itches. Within a minute your back aches. Within two, your thoughts are racing at full speed. Instead of peace, you feel irritation.
People with fast minds, high energy levels, or attention differences — what is often called ADHD or a Type A temperament — frequently conclude that meditation simply isn't for them. 'I'm too restless,' they say.
The problem isn't you. The problem is the tool. Stillness is counterproductive for people whose inner world is brimming with energy. What you need isn't passive relaxation — it's dynamic meditation and active attention management. In this article, we'll explore how high-energy people can find calm without forcing themselves to sit motionless — and we'll use the neuroscience of the 'fast brain' and concrete kinaesthetic practices to show why sitting still can actually be physiologically harmful for you.






