ELEVA
ELEVA × Nuvita · 6-Week Challenge
Week 4 of 6

Thoughts Are
Not Commands

You've noticed patterns, read your body, and named your emotions. This week you go to the source — your thoughts. Most stress is generated not by events, but by what we tell ourselves about them. This week, you learn to watch your thoughts instead of becoming them.

Your week 4 mantra
"This week, I notice my thoughts without automatically believing them. A thought is not a fact. I can observe it, question it, and choose what to do with it."
W1 · Notice
W2 · Body
W3 · Emotion
W4 · Thought
W5 · Choose
W6 · Integrate
Note from Lorella Week 4
"You've spent three weeks building awareness. Now you're going to the source.

The thought that says you're behind, failing, not enough — it's not a fact. It's your mind trying to protect you, in a clumsy way. This week, you don't have to believe every thought it generates. You can just notice them — and let them pass."
— Lorella Mainero · Founder, ELEVA

Week 4 Videos · Watch before you begin

Lorella · Week 4 — Thoughts Are Not Commands

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Practice of the Week · Thought Awareness Meditation

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This Week You Are Not Your Thoughts

You've built three weeks of awareness practice. You've noticed your patterns, read your body, named your emotions. This week you go to the source of a lot of your stress: your thoughts.

The mind generates between 50,000 and 80,000 thoughts a day — most of them automatic, repetitive, and not particularly accurate. This week you practice observing your thoughts with a little more distance. Not suppressing them. Not arguing with them. Just noticing: there is a thought happening.

Your core awareness question — Week 4
"Is this thought a fact — or is it just a thought?"
Mind Watch Your Thoughts — Don't Become Them

Most of the time, we don't have thoughts — our thoughts have us. We believe every story our mind tells us, especially the stressful ones. "This is never going to work." "I'm falling behind." "They think less of me." "I can't handle this." These feel like facts. They are not.

This week, practice noticing when your mind is generating a story — particularly a stressful one — and try to hold it slightly more loosely. You don't have to disprove it or replace it. Just see it as a thought, not a verdict.

WEEK 4 · MEDITATION · ELEVA 1 NOTICE A thought arises in the mind without judgment 2 "thought" LABEL Say silently: "that's a thought" name it once 3 RETURN Gently come back to the breath again and again Notice · Label · Return The core of thought awareness meditation
Notice · Label · Return

A thought is not a command.

Observe it. Name it. Return to the breath.

WEEK 4 · FOCUS PRACTICE · ELEVA one task · 10 minutes Active Task Tab 2 Tab 3 One task. Present. 10 min The One-Tab Rule One task · 10 minutes · full presence
The One-Tab Rule

Close the tabs in your mind.

One task. Ten minutes. Full presence.

Daily · 7–10 min

Weekly Meditation

This week's practice focuses on thought observation — watching thoughts arise and pass without getting pulled into them, the way you watch clouds move across a sky.

Daily · 30 seconds

Awareness Tracker

This week, when a thought is triggering your stress response, write it down. Then ask: is this a fact? Or is it a story my mind is generating?

Common stress-generating thought patterns to watch for
CatastrophizingMind-readingAll-or-nothingFuture-dwellingSelf-criticismComparing

You don't need to know which pattern you're in. Just notice: is my mind building a story right now? That noticing is enough to create distance from it.

TrackerCatch the thought — then question it
StateTriggerThe thought — exact wordsShift actionOutcome
This week, write down the actual thought that's driving your stress — in your own exact words. Not a summary. What is your mind actually saying? Then: is this definitely true? You don't need to answer. Just asking the question is the practice.
Stress The Space Between Thought and Belief

The most effective thing you can do with a stressful thought is not fight it or fix it — it's to simply notice it. "I'm noticing a thought that says I'm going to fail." The moment you say I notice a thought instead of I'm going to fail, the relationship to the thought changes completely.

This week, practice that one simple move: step slightly outside the thought and observe it. Then breathe.

Your Breath Reset — use it anytime

01
Inhale
Slowly, through the nose. Feel the belly expand first.
02
Exhale
Slowly, release fully. Longer than the inhale if you can.
03
Repeat
Three breaths. That is enough. You are already back.

Thoughts are not commands. They are not truth. They are information — sometimes useful, often automatic, occasionally wrong. You get to decide which ones to act on.

Nutrition Notice the Stories You Tell About Food

We all carry thought patterns about food — "I'm bad when I eat this," "I deserve a treat," "I've already ruined today." This week, notice those thoughts the same way you're noticing other stressful thoughts. They are stories — not facts.

The all-or-nothing thought

"I already ate badly today, so the day is ruined." Notice this thought when it appears. It is a thought — not a verdict. You can always choose the next meal.

The reward thought

"I deserve this." Sometimes true. Worth noticing what's underneath — are you hungry, or are you trying to manage a feeling?

3–4
Ready to eat
6–7
Satisfied
Keep using the Hunger Scale. This week, add awareness of the thoughts that arise around food. Not to change them yet — just to see them clearly. Awareness always comes before change.
Movement Choose Your Practice · 10–20 Minutes

"Choose one. Show up.
That's the whole thing."

Pick any practice below and give it 10 to 20 minutes. Your only job is to move with awareness — not to do it perfectly. Every one of these counts.

01

Desk Reset

Neck, shoulders, hips. Release where the day collects. No equipment, no changing clothes.

5–10 min · Chair
02

Activate — Get Moving

Walk, cycle, dance, bodyweight intervals. Get into the Blue or Orange zone. Feel your body wake up.

10–20 min · Any activity
03

Awareness Yoga

Slow, intentional movement paired with breath. Each pose releases what you've been carrying.

10–20 min · Small space
04

Walk with Awareness

Phone in pocket. Eyes forward. A 10-minute aware walk lowers cortisol more reliably than most supplements.

10–15 min · Outside
05

Strength

Home workout PDFs from Coach Jess are in the app. No gym. Strength and mindset work together.

15–20 min · PDF in app
06

Breathwork

4 minutes lowers cortisol, activates the parasympathetic system, and shifts your HRV. Movement from the inside.

4–10 min · Anywhere

"The goal is not to exhaust yourself. It is to move with enough awareness that your body and your mind begin to work together again."

— Coach Jess Biggs, MS, CSCS · Exercise Physiologist · Nuvita

Keep in mind this week
The mind generates 50,000–80,000 thoughts a day — most of them automatic and not especially accurate
'I notice a thought that says...' creates immediate distance from the thought
Catastrophizing, mind-reading, all-or-nothing thinking — these are patterns, not truths
This week, write down the exact words of a stressful thought — then ask: is this definitely true?
Message Lorella anytime