A mindfulness timer app should stay quiet enough to disappear.
Refresher combines a simple meditation timer with guided breathing modes, so you can choose structure when you need it and silence when you do not.
Short answer: use a mindfulness timer when open-ended meditation feels too vague.
A timer gives the session a container. You decide the duration, sit down, and finish without checking the clock. If silent practice is not working, guided breathing is one tap away.
Why a timer matters
The boundary is clear
A defined session makes it easier to start because you know exactly how long you are committing.
Silence stays available
Not every session needs a technique. Sometimes the best support is a quiet timer that does not interrupt.
Guidance is nearby
When the mind is too restless for silence, structured breathing gives attention something simple to follow.
How Refresher supports mindfulness sessions
Use the timer when you want a simple sit with a clear start and finish. Keep it short if you are building consistency, or extend the duration when the session feels stable.
Use guided breathing when silence turns into rumination. The same app can support both open awareness and structured nervous-system downshifts.
What the app adds
Common questions
Is Refresher only a breathing app?
No. It includes guided breathing techniques and a mindfulness timer for silent sessions.
How long should a mindfulness timer session be?
Start with one to five minutes if you are building consistency. Longer sessions are useful once the habit is stable.
Does Refresher record mindfulness minutes?
Refresher supports HealthKit mindfulness-minute logging for users who enable it.
Start with one quiet minute
Use Refresher when you want a timer that supports practice without taking over the practice.