🕯️ Sick Day Rituals #3
Some days, getting out of bed feels impossible.
Not because you’re lazy.
Not because you’re unmotivated.
But because your body is conserving what little energy it has.
On days like these, traditional rituals can feel overwhelming. Candles, tools, movement—things that normally feel grounding may suddenly feel like too much.
This is where the bedside altar comes in.
Not as a performance.
Not as a spiritual “to-do.”
But as a quiet companion.
What a Bedside Altar Is (and Isn’t)
A bedside altar is not about aesthetics.
It doesn’t need to be beautiful, symbolic, or complete.
It’s simply a point of focus—something near you that gently reminds your nervous system: you are safe, you are cared for, you are allowed to rest.
This kind of altar:
- Requires little to no energy
- Can be set up in minutes—or imagined entirely
- Exists to support your body, not demand from it
Why This Matters for Survivors
For many trauma survivors, being sick or confined to bed can trigger feelings of helplessness, fear, or loss of control.
A bedside altar gives you choice.
You choose what’s near you.
You choose what you look at.
You choose what brings comfort.
Even small choices help restore a sense of agency.
How to Create a Gentle Bedside Altar
You don’t need to gather everything.
Choose one or two items only—or none at all.
Option 1: One Physical Object
Something neutral or comforting:
- A smooth stone
- A piece of jewelry
- A small crystal
- A stuffed animal
- A photo that feels safe
Place it within reach or line of sight.
This object becomes an anchor.
Option 2: Soft Light
Light can regulate the nervous system.
Try:
- A single candle (only if it feels safe)
- A salt lamp
- A string of fairy lights
- Natural daylight through a window
No light is also okay. Darkness can be protective.
Option 3: Scent or Sound
Only if your body tolerates it.
- A familiar tea nearby
- A comforting essential oil (not required)
- A song you’ve listened to a hundred times
- Silence
Familiarity is often more soothing than novelty.
A No-Tools Bedside Altar (For Very Low Spoon Days)
If you can’t reach for anything, you can create an altar internally.
Close your eyes and imagine:
- A warm glow at your chest
- A gentle figure sitting nearby
- A safe place you’ve been before
You don’t need to visualize clearly.
Intention is enough.
How to Use Your Bedside Altar
There is no right way.
You might:
- Look at it while breathing slowly
- Rest your hand near it
- Whisper a single phrase like:
“I am safe to rest.”
Even one second of attention is enough.
When Guilt or Restlessness Appears
If your mind says:
“I should be doing more.”
Try responding gently:
“This is me doing something.”
“This is care.”
“This counts.”
Because it does.
Closing
Your body doesn’t need you to be spiritual right now.
It needs you to be kind.
A bedside altar isn’t about devotion—it’s about companionship.
Let it sit with you.
Let it be small.
Let it be imperfect.
That is more than enough.
Next in the Sick Day Rituals series: Breathwork for congestion, anxiety, and moments when your chest feels tight.
