Mindfulness Exercises, with Sean Fargo

Realizing Your Best Moments Almost Never Happened

Sean Fargo

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Ever notice how your best memories start to fade into the background until they feel ordinary? We flip that script with a guided mindfulness practice built around mental subtraction—the science-backed move of imagining your treasured moment never happened—so its value returns with force. Across just a few minutes, we help you settle the body, pick one meaningful event, and trace the unlikely chain of choices, timing, and support that brought it to life.

We then walk through the near-misses: the unread email, the missed bus that didn’t happen, the small yes you almost didn’t say. That gentle counterfactual isn’t about regret; it’s about clarity. By seeing how easily the moment could have vanished, appreciation deepens. You’ll explore the benefits that flowed from that turning point—friendships formed, skills unlocked, confidence grown—and give your nervous system space to actually feel gratitude rather than recite it. The approach blends simple somatic cues (relax the jaw, drop the shoulders, steady the belly breath) with cognitive reframing to shift attention from entitlement to awe.

This session is ideal if you want a fast, effective reset that lasts longer than a quick affirmation. It’s grounded in positive psychology and mindfulness research, sometimes called the George Bailey effect, and it’s designed to be repeated with different memories throughout the week. By the end, you’ll not only recall what happened—you’ll sense how precious it is that it happened at all, and carry that recognition into your next conversation, choice, and breath.

If this practice helps, subscribe, share it with a friend who could use a lift, and leave a quick review to help others find the show. What meaningful moment will you subtract—and then celebrate—today?

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Email: Sean@MindfulnessExercises.com

Mindfulness Exercises with Sean Fargo is a practical, grounded mindfulness podcast for people who want meditation to actually help in real life.

Hosted by Sean Fargo — a former Buddhist monk, mindfulness teacher, and founder of MindfulnessExercises.com — this podcast explores how mindfulness can support mental health, emotional regulation, trauma sensitivity, chronic pain, leadership, creativity, and meaningful work.

Each episode offers a mix of:

  • Practical mindfulness and meditation teachings
  • Conversations with respected meditation teachers, clinicians, authors, and researchers
  • Real-world insights for therapists, coaches, yoga teachers, educators, and caregivers
  • Gentle reflections for anyone navigating stress, anxiety, burnout, grief, or change

If you’re interested in:

  • Mindfulness meditation for everyday life
  • Trauma-sensitive and compassion-based practices
  • Teaching mindfulness in an authentic, non-performative way
  • Deepening your own practice while supporting others

…you’re in the right place.

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Welcome And Practice Overview

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Mindfulness exercises dot com.

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Mental subtraction of positive events.

Recall A Meaningful Positive Event

Trace The Conditions That Enabled It

Imagine The Near-Misses And What-Ifs

Savor Benefits And Gratitude

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Let's begin by finding a posture that feels both relaxed and alert. Softening around any tension or tightness in the body. Relaxing the belly. And allowing your belly to rise and fall with each breath. Dropping your shoulders. Loosening your jaw. And softening the muscles of the face and around the eyes. You can close your eyes or look downward just to limit visual distractions. And bring to mind a very positive event in your life. Something you feel very happy about in your life. Maybe it's an educational or a career achievement. The birth of a child. Meeting a dear friend or mentor. Or a special trip that you took. But think back to the time of this event and the circumstances that made this possible to begin with. Everything that happened to bring this to life? What were all of the factors involved? Now see if you can consider the ways in which this event may never have happened in the first place. For example, if you hadn't have happened to have learned about a certain job that was opening at the right moment, or walking down the street at that specific time, or making a decision to do something that might have felt irrelevant or uncertain or inconsequential at the time. Imagining all of the possible events and decisions that could have gone differently and prevented this event from occurring. All the possible situations, circumstances, choices that may have been large or small that could have gone differently. Prevented this beautiful thing in your life from entering your life in the first place. Taking in all the benefits that is brought you. All of the beautiful moments or feelings. That it could have been very different. So appreciating all of the good that has come from that event. Allowing yourself to feel grateful that things happened as they didn't.