7 Daily Rituals to Help You Manage Recurrent Pericarditis

Maintaining a daily routine is essential to living well when you have recurrent pericarditis. While it can feel as though everything is on hold during a flare-up, small everyday habits can go a long way toward providing a healthy amount of structure and making things a bit more manageable.
Daily rituals, including meditation, good sleep hygiene, and consistent medication timing, can help you move from reacting to your symptoms to managing them proactively and helping prevent new flares.
These practices “aren't just additions — they’re part of the stabilizing structure of care,” says Tarak Rambhatla, MD, a cardiologist with Miami Cardiac and Vascular Institute, part of Baptist Health South Florida. Such rituals not only complement the conventional medical treatment of recurrent pericarditis but also support your overall health.
1. Meditation
Even just sitting in a quiet room can help manage the chronic stress that may contribute to inflammation, says Dr. Rambhatla.
Give it a try: Sit comfortably, close your eyes, and focus on your breath. Notice the air entering your nose and your chest rising. When your mind drifts to symptoms or “what if” thoughts, gently bring your attention back to your breath.
A few minutes of meditation a day can help you respond to stress more steadily, rather than react to it, supporting both symptom management and emotional well-being.

2. Focused Breathing
Focused breathing is a simple tool you can use anywhere to help regulate stress, steady your heart rate, and signal your nervous system to relax. Stress can be part of a healthy response to challenges in your life, but it can become counterproductive when it’s chronic. Rambhatla says it’s important to have tools you can use to help reset the body.
Practicing breath work regularly — whether in the morning, before bed, or during moments of tension — can make it easier to return to a steadier baseline.
3. Mindful Eating
The ritual is making intentional choices at each meal, rather than eating on autopilot. Focus on simple, repeatable swaps like using olive oil instead of butter and choosing whole grains over refined carbohydrates, says Rambhatla. These mindful eating decisions can help you better understand how food affects your body, as well as build more stable, heart-healthy habits.
4. Good Sleep Hygiene
Sleep plays a key role in recovery, stress regulation, and inflammation. When sleep is inconsistent or interrupted, symptoms like fatigue and discomfort may feel more intense, says Rambhatla.
If discomfort makes it hard to lie flat, small adjustments like elevating your upper body may help you get more comfortable. These repeatable habits can improve both sleep and symptom management.
5. Gentle Movement
Movement can support overall cardiovascular health, but it needs to match where you are in your disease cycle.
During a flare-up, rest is essential. Rambhatla advises avoiding significant physical activity while symptoms are active. “We want you to rest and not do significant activity for at least a month,” he says.
Once your symptoms improve and you’re cleared by your care team, gentle movement can be reintroduced as a daily ritual, focusing on consistency and gradual progression rather than intensity.
6. Medication Mapping
Taking your medications consistently is especially important, as staying on schedule helps reduce the risk of symptoms returning.
The goal is to make dosing feel automatic — part of your daily rhythm, not something you have to remember in the moment. Pairing your medication with an existing habit, like taking with your morning coffee or as part of your bedtime routine, can help turn it into a simple daily ritual.
A seven-day pill organizer can also help you manage all your medications easily. “We like the pill boxes, so you have your days mapped out,” says Rambhatla. Phone reminders can add an extra layer of support on busy days or during travel. Together, these small steps help build consistency.
7. Journaling
Keeping a simple daily journal, whether on paper or in a phone app, can help you and your care team better understand the patterns of your recurrent pericarditis. “Having a sense of what you're putting into your body is a good thing, so you can discuss it with your physician,” says Rambhatla.
Beyond diet, journaling can help track symptoms such as fatigue, fever, or chest pain, especially when symptoms change with position or activity. These notes may help you identify patterns or potential triggers that contribute to your flare-ups.
Journaling can also support treatment monitoring. For instance, recording how you feel after starting or tapering medications may help you notice whether symptoms are improving or returning.
Just as important, journaling can support emotional well-being. Recurrent pericarditis can cause stress and anxiety, and writing down these feelings can help you externalize those thoughts, rather than hold them internally.
How to Build a Ritual Routine That Sticks
The best way to make rituals really work for you is to build upon them gradually. Pick one ritual, like shutting off your phone 30 minutes before bedtime, and do it until it feels natural. Then add another.
“It’s just building on good habits,” says Rambhatla.
The Takeaway
- Establishing daily rituals can help people with recurrent pericarditis move from reacting to symptoms to proactively managing their cardiovascular health and emotional well-being.
- Mental health practices like meditation, focused breathing, and journaling can help reduce chronic stress, track symptom triggers, and manage the anxiety of future flare-ups.
- Lifestyle adjustments such as following a Mediterranean-style diet, practicing good sleep hygiene, and adhering to a consistent medication schedule are essential for stabilizing the body and reducing inflammation.
- While rest is required during active flare-ups, you can gradually reintroduce gentle movement and stack new habits onto existing routines to ensure long-term consistency in your care plan.
Resources We Trust
- Cleveland Clinic: Heart-Healthy Diets: Eating Plans Your Heart Will Love
- American College of Cardiology: Management of Acute and Recurrent Pericarditis
- Mayo Clinic: Meditation: A Simple, Fast Way to Reduce Stress
- American Heart Association: Addressing Recurrent Pericarditis
- MedlinePlus: Being Active When You Have Heart Disease
- The Promise of Meditation for the Heart and Mind. American Heart Association. June 16, 2022.
- 3 Breathing Exercises to Relieve Stress. British Heart Foundation. December 11, 2023.
- Mediterranean Diet for Heart Health. Mayo Clinic. July 15, 2023.
- Brucato A et al. Interleukin‐1 Trap Rilonacept Improved Health‐Related Quality of Life and Sleep in Patients With Recurrent Pericarditis: Results From the Phase 3 Clinical Trial RHAPSODY. Journal of the American Heart Association. October 2022.
- Sleep Tips: 6 Steps to Better Sleep. Mayo Clinic. January 31, 2025.
- Grant J et al. The Impact of Physical Activity on Pericarditis. Current Cardiology Reports. August 27, 2021.
- Habit Stacking for Success. American Heart Association. September 9, 2025.

Chung Yoon, MD
Medical Reviewer

Susan Jara
Author
Susan Jara is a health communications strategist and writer with more than 15 years of experience transforming complex medical information into clear, accurate, and engaging conten...