Background: This month, my friend Davis shared a new blog post for www.sereneluna.net. You might recall his previous guest contributions. Below ↓ I’ve linked all his past posts for easy access. If you’re curious or want a refresher on his insights about personal growth and development, you can find them here:
1️⃣ Unmasking Your True Potential to Overcome Imposter Syndrome
2️⃣ 10 Self-Improvement Habits to Make You Happier
3️⃣ Having a Midlife Crisis? Here are 5 Changes You Can Make to Overcome It
4️⃣ 6 Strategies to Boost Your Confidence
Disclaimer: Davis runs a blog called https://businessisfun.net that I highly recommend you check out and follow him if you haven’t done so already. Since Davis wrote the following guest post, I cannot take credit for it. While you are here, I would love to hear your thoughts about this article. Let’s get started, shall we?

It’s easy to get stuck in the same mental health advice loop: meditate, journal, drink more water, get eight hours of sleep. All helpful, sure—but what happens when those tools stop working? Or when they don’t click with you to begin with? Everyone’s brain has its own flavor, and sometimes, feeling better requires coloring outside the lines. So instead of repeating the same mental health script, let’s talk about some under-the-radar methods that might actually light you up.

A Practical Guide to Finding Inner Peace
1. Build Something Bad on Purpose. Perfectionism has a way of masquerading as productivity, but it’s often just a bully in your brain wearing a tie. One way to push back? Make something intentionally terrible. Write a god-awful poem, draw the world’s ugliest self-portrait, build a cardboard robot that barely stands up. The point is to disarm that inner critic by showing yourself it’s safe to fail—and to have fun doing it. When you practice letting go of the outcome, you’ll be surprised how much space opens up inside your mind.
2. Hang Out With an Unrelated Elder. There’s something wildly grounding about spending time with someone who’s lived through decades of life that you haven’t. Especially if they’re not family. They come with fewer emotional landmines and usually a good story or two. Whether it’s through a volunteer program or just striking up conversation at the same coffee shop every week, this kind of relationship resets your priorities in the best way. Plus, you get wisdom without the lecture tone.
3. Stay in the Present. Mindfulness isn’t just about deep breathing or sitting cross-legged in silence—it’s about paying attention on purpose, even when your thoughts are loud and messy. When you’re grounded in the now, you’re less likely to spiral into regrets about the past or anxieties about the future. It helps you notice the small good things—the sound of your neighbor’s laugh, the sun slanting across your floor, the taste of your first sip of coffee. By embracing the present moment without judgment, you create space for a more positive and balanced mindset.
4. Put Your Hands in Actual Dirt. Look, you can read a hundred articles about how gardening helps with anxiety, but it’s not just about the plants—it’s about the grime. There’s something deeply recalibrating about plunging your hands into the earth. It doesn’t have to be a full garden. Even a little patch of herbs in a pot can connect you to something older than worry. When your mind feels like static, dirt reminds you you’re a living thing.
5. Invent a Personal Ceremony. Rituals don’t need to be spiritual or dramatic to be meaningful. Sometimes your brain just wants a sign that things are moving forward. You could write down something you’re done with, fold it up, and burn it in a safe place. Or take a “transition walk” every time you finish a tough task. The key is consistency and intention—doing the same thing in the same way to mark shifts, even tiny ones. Over time, it helps your mind organize chaos into something with shape.
6. Get Obsessed with a Hyper-Niche Topic. Mental health thrives when curiosity takes the wheel. Deep-diving into something super specific—like traditional Norwegian sweater patterns or 1970s underground punk zines—can be surprisingly healing. It gives your brain a break from you and your thoughts, which is a gift. You don’t need to turn it into a side hustle or share it with anyone. The joy is in having something that’s just yours, untouched by algorithms or opinions.
7. Rent a Weird Airbnb in Your Own City. You don’t have to travel across the globe to shake your brain out of a slump. Book the strangest Airbnb within 30 minutes of your home—a yurt, a converted bus, a room with 18 lava lamps—and go there with no expectations. The goal isn’t luxury. It’s novelty. A change of scenery, even for one night, can jolt your senses in the best way and make your inner world feel less stale.
8. Host a “No-Small-Talk” Dinner. Surface-level conversation is exhausting when you’re already mentally taxed. So flip the script. Invite a couple of people over and have a rule: no small talk. Come prepared with big, weird, or deep questions and see what happens. Even if it gets awkward, it’ll be real, and your brain will thank you for bypassing the usual social autopilot. Connection is more healing when it’s not wrapped in “How’s work?”
Improving your mental health doesn’t always mean applying cookie-cutter solutions to your one-of-a-kind experience. You don’t have to vibe with meditation apps or force yourself into gratitude journals if they don’t click. What matters most is that you find what feels right for you—even if it looks strange from the outside. Especially if it looks strange from the outside. Sometimes, mental clarity comes from stepping off the obvious path and walking straight into the peculiar. That’s where your mind gets to play, to stretch, and to heal—not by following a blueprint, but by building your own.
If you’ve enjoyed this article and would like to read more posts from this blogger, you can visit their website at https://businessisfun.net. Finally, if you learned something new from this blog post, feel free to join the conversation by leaving a comment below ↓ Interested in writing a guest post for www.sereneluna.net? If you would like to write a guest post, please email me your idea by filling out this form.
Thanks for stopping by!

All really great tips! For me, what’s helped most with my mental health is making conscious decisions to focus on what makes me happy and making time for my hobbies instead of wallowing in my misery too much. When we focus too much on the negative we end up getting stuck there.