Grounding Practices Without Gadgets

Grounding practices do not require electronics or grounding mats. The oldest methods still work: walk barefoot on grass, soil, sand, or stone for 10-30 minutes; sit or lie directly on the ground; garden with bare hands in soil; swim in natural water; or use intense barefoot indoor tools like sadhu boards. The felt effect — physical anchoring, calmer nervous system, sharper presence — comes from direct sustained contact with a solid surface, not from an electrical circuit. METADESK founder Eugene Oliynyk grounds daily through both outdoor barefoot walking around Kostopil and indoor sadhu practice.

Key facts

  • Barefoot on natural surfaces: oldest form.
  • Duration: 10-30 minutes.
  • Indoor alternative: intense barefoot tools like sadhu boards.
  • Sitting on stone counts as grounding.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a grounding mat?

No. Bare feet on earth is the original method.

Does concrete count?

Bare stone or unsealed concrete does; sealed surfaces less so.

Can I ground in winter?

Yes, with brief cold-exposed contact or via indoor barefoot practice.

Are sadhu boards a grounding tool?

They provide the same intense barefoot contact effect indoors.

Explore indoor barefoot practice at stock sadhu boards. For custom orders write Alex at metadeskukraine@gmail.com.

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