As a health and wellness writer, I’m familiar with the benefits of meditation and how the practice can help reduce stress, improve sleep, and increase self-awareness.1 But even with that understanding, I’ve struggled over the years to develop my own meditation practice.
After repeatedly trying and failing to incorporate meditation into my daily life, I had mostly given up on the practice. But then I discovered the world of meditation apps which is when I found Aura.
Available on iOS and Android, Aura is a wellness app designed to help users develop mindfulness practices, improve emotional well-being, and support healthier sleep (another challenge I’ve faced for years). After using the app daily for a month, I am starting to see firsthand how meditation, breathwork, and hypnosis can help me manage stress and feel more grounded.
What I First Learned About Aura
Launched in 2017, Aura is a wellness app with an expansive library of expert-created “tracks” designed to boost mood and improve well-being. It uses artificial intelligence to gather data on how you are using the app and provides personalized recommendations based on this information.
Each track offers a particular mindfulness practice or experience, like a guided meditation, a lesson on gratitude, or a short story focused on helping you unwind at the end of the day.
Variety of features
When I first started poking around on Aura’s homepage, I was impressed with the amount of variety the app offered. I could choose to listen to half an hour of soothing nature sounds or select a guided meditation based on my mood.
Here’s a look at some of the different types of tracks Aura provides and what they can help with.
- Meditation is a practice that helps train your mind to focus your attention and awareness on a particular activity, thought, object, or bodily sensation.
- Hypnosis is a state of deep physical and mental relaxation that can help you gain clarity and feel a sense of calm.
- Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a therapeutic practice that helps reshape negative thought patterns.
- Breathwork refers to a set of breathing practices designed to help relieve stress and increase relaxation.
- Short stories can help you unwind and fall asleep, boost your creativity, or inspire you.
- Motivational tracks from life coaches can help you set goals, improve confidence, and practice gratitude.
How I Signed Up for Aura
Aura offers a free version of the app that allows users to access one three-minute session a day for a week (but only if you sign up for the annual plan). I was looking for more than that, so I opted for the premium subscription (the monthly plan), which gave me unlimited access to everything the app has to offer, from meditation and breathwork to coaching, stories, music, hypnosis, and more.
How Much Aura Costs
Here’s a look at Aura’s premium subscription plans:
- Monthly plan for $11.99
- Annual plan for $59.99 (comes with a 7-day free trial)
- Lifetime plan for $399.99
- Family plan for $119.99 (allows you to add more members to one subscription)
After downloading the app, I set up my profile by answering a few short questions about what I was hoping to get out of the app. I was first asked to select what I was most interested in from a set of options, including:
- Boosting energy
- Improving focus
- Morning meditation
- Relaxation
- Managing stress
- Sleep
- Parenting
- Self-esteem
- Gratitude
- Beginner meditation
- Advanced meditation
- Dealing with anger
After that, I was prompted to select reasons why I wanted to focus on these specific areas. I could select answers such as “to have a healthy response to stress” and “to find more peaceful moments in my day.” Other questions pertained to demographic information like my race, age, and gender identity.
How I Started Using Aura
My Aura homepage showed me suggestions based on my answers. I could also record my mood each day through a mood tracker at the top of the app’s home screen. After recording how I felt that day by choosing from options like “Anxious” or “Stressed” to “Great” or “Grateful,” the app recommended a meditation based on how I felt.
The recommendations were a great starting point, but I loved that I wasn’t locked into just the tracks recommended to me.
Browsing Library
I was able to browse the app’s entire library, which included thousands of options, and choose what I wanted to listen to.
At first glance, the staggering amount of options felt overwhelming, but I was able to browse tracks by category (meditation, breathwork, stories, etc.), which gave me a sense of what was available and what I was drawn to.
From there I was able to save the tracks I was most interested in and even combine tracks to make playlists. I selected sleep meditations, relaxing sleep stories, and breathwork exercises to listen to at night, as well as energizing tracks to help me set intentions for the morning.
Aura’s tracks vary in length. You can choose from several short three- to 10-minute tracks or longer 30- to 60-minute sessions. This was a huge draw for me as a meditation beginner. Starting with a five-minute session feels a lot less intimidating than trying to meditate for half an hour right off the bat.
When I first started using Aura, I created a few playlists with some short tracks that looked interesting to me, like an introduction to chakras, about which I didn’t know much and was curious to learn more. I also selected some meditations focused on gratitude and sleep stories that looked soothing.
Using Aura
After familiarizing myself with the content, I decided to use Aura in the morning when I first woke up before getting out of bed.
In the mornings, I’d open the app and log how I was feeling in the mood tracker on the home screen. Then I’d turn on the recommended meditation based on my mood. These morning meditations were usually pretty short and an easy way for me to set positive intentions for the day.
I’ve found meditating in the morning helped me feel more grounded and calmer than what I was doing before—scrolling social media or reading the news as soon as I opened my eyes.
Using Aura to Help Me Sleep
At night I have always struggled with sleep. I have an anxiety disorder, which can sometimes make falling asleep difficult, especially when I’m stressed. Given this history, I was skeptical Aura would change anything for me. But, to my surprise, many of the sleep stories and guided meditations really did help quiet the anxious thoughts that often keep me tossing and turning at night.
Surprise Sleep
I remember turning it on and thinking there was no way I’d actually fall asleep, only to wake up the next morning wondering what happened at the end of the meditation.
All the tracks, especially the ones focused on sleep, are remarkably soothing. The teachers and coaches talk slowly against a background of nature sounds that really do make you feel like you’re somewhere else. Whenever I turn on a track, whether it’s a story, meditation, or soothing nature sounds, I can physically feel my body relax.
Not every track I listened to was a hit. A few of the short stories weren’t engaging for me and some of the coaching tracks didn’t seem particularly applicable to my life. But there are plenty of tracks to choose from and for every track that didn’t seem up my alley, I was able to find a different one that works for me.
Pros and Cons
My month-long experience with Aura was positive and there are a lot of things I liked about the app. But no app is perfect. Here’s a look at some pros and cons.
- Personalized recommendations
- Provides daily notifications to remind you to meditate
- Thousands of meditations to choose from
- Visually appealing and calming
- Meditation narrators have soothing voices
- Tracks vary in length with a good mix of both short and long meditations
- Doesn’t offer much in the free version
- Free trial only available if you purchase the annual premium subscription
- The amount of content can feel overwhelming
- Lifetime plan is pricey
- No tutorials or guides on how to get the most out of the app
Final Thoughts
I’ll admit I was skeptical when I first downloaded Aura, but the experience was better than I’d anticipated. With thousands of tracks to choose from, I found there was always something new to learn. And, as a beginner, I was happy to see shorter meditations alongside longer ones.