by Oli Anderson, Transformational Coach for Realness
Create a Personalised 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine for Daily Integration and Growth into REALNESS
There are already a lot of articles on shadow work floating around the internet (many of which are on this website):
Some are academic, some are mystical, and some are so complex and dressed in such flowery, Shakespearean language that they make it sound like you need a PhD in psychology, a candlelit ritual space, and three hours of uninterrupted silence just to meet a suppressed emotion.
What you’re about to read on this page definitely isn’t that:
This article is about something far simpler and far more usable: a 10-minute daily shadow work routine you can actually do in real life even if you’re busy, distracted, or not in the mood for a painful spiritual self-interrogation.
The only aim here is to strip shadow work back to its core essence and make it practical, repeatable, and grounded so that you can get started and be consistent in terms of becoming more integrated and whole in yourself (if you want to go deeper into the theory, there are other articles on the site – just search ‘shadow work’ – and you can also explore my book Shadow Life: Freedom from BS in an Unreal World if you want the full map).
What we’re focusing on here is the implementation and the idea that integration doesn’t happen through insight alone – it happens through repetition.
10 minutes a day is enough to start changing the way you relate to yourself no matter who you are.
Let’s dig a little deeper:

The 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine: What We Cover in This Article
- Create a Personalised 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine for Daily Integration and Growth into REALNESS
- What Shadow Work Actually Is (Without the BS)
- Why a 10-Minute Practice Gets Results
- The Core Principle: Awareness → Acceptance → Action
- The 10-Minute Shadow Exercise
- Bonus: Optional 10-Minute Shadow Work Routines “Modules”
- What to Expect If You Do This 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine Daily
- The Final Word: Your 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine
What Shadow Work Actually Is (Without the BS)
If you strip away the jargon (which in my opinion is often a form of obfuscation because the person using the jargon hasn’t actually been that deep into their own shadow), then we can say that:
Shadow work is just the process of reclaiming the ‘parts’ of yourself you’ve (unconsciously) exiled.
What we’re referring to here are all the parts that – at some point in your life – were met with judgment, rejection, or shame and so, instead of being expressed openly, they were pushed underground.
They key point to remember, though, is that they never really went anywhere and so they’re not ‘gone’ – they’re just hidden.
For most of us, the shadow self forms when we stop relating to ourselves with acceptance and start relating through judgement instead. This is the turning point because it’s when we make this shift that the ego is created.
For simplicity (and truth), we can say that the ego is simply:
A mask we build to be acceptable but, over time, we forget we’re wearing it.
It’s important to realise that the creation of the shadow self and ego doesn’t just cost us access to ‘bad’ (a common myth) ‘parts’ of ourselves – it means that lose access to REAL parts of ourselves.
This is important because it’s a reminder that the shadow isn’t just made of ‘negative’ traits – it also contains:
- Our real feelings about things.
- Our real beliefs (not the socially approved ones).
- Emotions we were never allowed to fully express.
- Our true vision, goals, and ideals.
- Our actual values and personality traits.
Some of these may initially uncomfortable to face, some are powerful beyond measure, and some are deeply creative or alive but all of them are very REAL and anything real that gets suppressed doesn’t disappear – it just starts shaping your life indirectly (from beneath the surface of your life).
This is where people often feel stuck, lost, or disconnected from any sense of true meaning – not because something is missing but because ‘parts’ of them that are essential to feel a sense of wholeness have been split off.
Shadow work is simply the process of undoing that split – not intellectually (at the level of concepts alone) but experientially (at the level of the body and beyond).
We can do this by learning to become aware of the things we’ve sent into exile, accepting them for what they are and then, ultimately, through action in the world because expression without action is still incomplete integration.
(Awareness, Acceptance, and Action works every time which is why I build my coaching containers around it)!
Why a 10-Minute Practice Gets Results
The modern world tends to overcomplicate inner work because we assume that if something is deep, it must also be long, intense, and emotionally dramatic.
Actually, though, the truth is that integration doesn’t require intensity for the sake of intensity – instead, it requires consistency and direct experience.
(One phenomenon I’ve seen for sure is that some people get addicted to shadow work and spend their whole lives going to courses and retreats etc. but never actually making progress – in fact, they just end up being stuck in shadow work).
Ten minutes done consistently day-by-day (or most days, at least) is enough because:
- It’s short enough to be done daily without resistance.
- It prevents overthinking and spiritual procrastination.
- It builds a consistent rhythm of direct experience of connecting with the shadow rather than occasional deep dives that never make any lasting changes.
- It makes shadow work part of life instead of an escape from it (spiritual bypassing).
This is not about ‘fixing’ yourself (because you’re not ‘broken’) but about repeatedly returning to what is real inside you and letting it be seen.
This alone begins to reorganise your internal relationship with yourself and help you to start shifting from unreal (ego) to real (realness).
The Core Principle: Awareness → Acceptance → Action
The daily 10-minute shadow work practice follows the three transformational stages I mentioned above:
- Awareness: Noticing what is present.
- Acceptance: Allowing it without judgement.
- Action: Expressing it in some real-world form.
Most people get stuck at ‘Awareness’ which means that they notice or become conceptually and not experientially aware of something about themselves, analyse it, and stop there.
The problem with this is that insight without expression in the form of real action becomes inaction and intellectualisation whereas expression without awareness becomes unconscious repetition.
Integration requires all three so you can actually move forward in an aligned and real way.
The 10-Minute Shadow Exercise
Set a timer for 10 minutes (that’s literally it) – don’t worry about creating the perfect conditions for this…just work on being consistent with it so your results keep building and compounding over time.
Here is the structure you’ll be walking yourself through every day. If it helps to use a journal and write things down then definitely do this but it’s not required.
Here we go:
Minute 1-2: Arrival and Check-in
Start by checking in with yourself and asking some simple questions about what’s actually going on inside yourself:
- What am I feeling right now, really?
- What am I avoiding feeling?
- What is most alive in me at this moment (even if it’s uncomfortable)?
Don’t try to change anything – just develop the skill of noticing. Even if nothing comes up, that’s still data because silence, numbness, or distraction are also shadow ‘stuff’.
If you do this every day, you will develop more awareness of your own emotions and body over time – this is a great strength to have in itself.
Minute 3–5: Identify the Hidden or Judged ‘Part’
Now gently explore any areas of resistance or inner friction a little more:
- What part of me do I not want to admit is here?
- If I removed judgement, what would I honestly be thinking or feeling?
- What am I pretending not to care about when I really care about it a lot?
- What reaction in me feels slightly “not acceptable”?
This is where the shadow starts to show itself and things will start to surface – it might be anger, jealousy, desire, ambition, fear, grief, or even positive traits like confidence or power that were once suppressed because it didn’t serve the world that you grew up in (or, more accurately, the authority figures in that world who told you who you’re supposed to be).
The general rule is simple:
If you feel resistance, you’re probably getting closer to excavating the shadow.
Minute 6–7: Name It Without Judgement
Now it’s time to name whatever is going on – not as a story (because that will most likely just reinforce the ego which is what keeps the shadow in hiding in the first place), just as recognition.
Some simple examples:
- “There is anger here”.
- “There is a part of me that wants recognition”.
- “There is fear of being seen”.
- “There is judgement towards other people’s success”.
(“There is” allows you to step back and just observe it without feeding into it or identifying with it).
Remember, you’re not ‘solving’ or ‘fixing’ anything – you’re simply starting to allow yourself to witness whatever has been exiled.
Naming reduces the fragmentation of that “inner split” between ego and shadow because it brings the unconscious into contact with awareness.
Minute 8–9: Allow Expression
Now choose whichever one of the following expression methods that feels the most ‘right’ to you:
- Write unfiltered for 60–90 seconds.
- Speak aloud privately (no censoring)>
- Physical release (shake your hands, stretch, walk, breathe deeply, etc).
- Journal a single sentence truth: “What I really want to say is…”
The aim is not elegance or perfection so don’t JUDGE yourself as you do this as that’s absolutely counterproductive
What you’re really seeking is a release of containment so that blocked energy can start to move again – shadow ‘stuff’ becomes less dense when it is expressed.
Minute 10: Translate into One Small Action
This is the most important step and what all the last 9-minutes have been building up to:
Ask yourself what you can DO:
- What is one small real action that reflects what I just noticed?
- How would this part of me want to express itself in life today?
- What would honesty look like in behaviour and not just thought?
The next step is to choose something simple that you can actually DO:
- Send a message you’ve been avoiding.
- Admit something honestly in conversation.
- Stop suppressing an opinion.
- Take one step toward a real goal.
- Set a boundary and maintain it.
- Say “Yes” to something real you usually avoid.
- Say “No” to something unreal you usually tolerate.
- Etc. etc. etc.
This is where shadow work becomes realness because nothing is integrated until it is expressed in life via real action (not ego-based action).

Check out my book Trust: A Manual in Becoming the Void, Building Flow, and Finding Peace if you want to go deeper into realness by facing the shadow and taking real action.
Bonus: Optional 10-Minute Shadow Work Routines “Modules”
To keep the practice alive, you can vary the approach each day by to keep thing fresh – here are some simple “modules” you can plug into your 10 minutes:
1. The Trigger Trace
Reflect on a moment recently where you felt emotionally triggered by something.
Ask yourself:
- What exactly bothered me?
- Where is that same quality in me?
This is one of the fastest ways into reverse engineering the situations that unfold in your life to start seeing your own shadow ‘stuff’.
2. The Projection Audit
Look at someone you strongly admire or dislike and then ask yourself some basic questions about projection:
- What do I project onto them?
- What does this say about what I need to release or integrate within myself?
Projection is shadow ‘stuff’ wearing another face and so if you can start to see yourself in it then you can start to free yourself.
3. The Forbidden Desire Scan
Get a little bit audacious and ask yourself straight up:
- What do I secretly want but don’t admit?
- What would I pursue if I knew I couldn’t fail or be judged?
Desire is often one of the most heavily exiled aspects of the self because when we start acting on what we really desire then the ego always comes under threat.
4. The Suppressed Emotion Release
Pick one emotion that might feel a little alien or risky to you (anger, sadness, fear, excitement, etc) and ask yourself:
- When did I last fully allow this emotion to just be?
- Where is it currently ‘stuck’ in my body as a physiological sensation?
After you’ve done this one allow 2–3 minutes of physical or written expression.
5. The Values Reclamation
Start to uncover you’re REAL values (instead of the values you just somewhere picked up from the world):
- What actually matters to me beneath expectations?
- Where am I living according to inherited values rather than real ones?
Then identify one action that aligns with your true values and go do it!
What to Expect If You Do This 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine Daily
At first, doing this 10-minute shadow work routine may almost feel too ‘simple’ but over time you’re gonna notice that:
- You become more emotionally honest with yourself and others.
- You stop over-identifying with your thoughts.
- You feel less internally split.
- You become more decisive.
- You start recognising self-deception faster.
- You begin acting from clarity instead of pressure.
- You can actually feel your feelings and be aware of what’s going on in your body (so you’re not stuck in your head all the time).
- Most importantly, you begin to feel more REAL.

The Final Word: Your 10-Minute Shadow Work Routine
The shadow is not an ‘enemy’ or anything you need to fear – it’s simply everything in you that was once exiled but which holds the key to reclaiming yourself and your real life.
The thing to remember is that anything real can’t stay exiled forever without cost – it doesn’t just ‘disappear’ and instead it influences behaviour indirectly by leaking out in projection, self-sabotage, anxiety, numbness, and confusion.
Integration is not about becoming ‘better’ or ‘fixing yourself – it’s just about about becoming whole enough to finally stop fighting yourself.
Keep it simple. Ten minutes. Every day.
Awareness, Acceptance, Action and a slow return to realness.
Stay real out there,

P.S. If you want to go deeper into Awareness, Acceptance, and Action and living your real life then book a free coaching session with me and I’ll help you to take real action.








