When was the last time you experienced true silence? Not just the absence of sound, but the absence of input. No screens. No notifications. No voices demanding your attention. No background hum of information.
For most people, the answer is: they can't remember.
We live in noise. We swim in it. We've become so accustomed to constant input that silence feels uncomfortable. Empty. Wrong.
The Noise Floor
There's noise outside — traffic, construction, other people's lives. There's noise on screens — endless content, endless updates, endless opinions. And there's noise inside — the constant chatter of your own mind, amplified by everything you've consumed.
This isn't accidental. Noise is a tool. A distracted mind doesn't question. A mind filled with noise doesn't hear its own wisdom. It doesn't access the deeper knowing that arises in stillness.
Noise drowns out the signal. The signal is your own inner voice — the one that knows what's true, what matters, what you really need.
The Fear of Silence
Why do we fill every moment with noise? Because silence is confronting. In silence, you meet yourself. You feel what you've been avoiding. You hear thoughts you've been drowning out.
The noise is a buffer. It keeps the uncomfortable stuff at bay. But it also keeps out the good stuff — the insight, the creativity, the peace that only comes when you stop consuming and start being.
Finding the Quiet
You don't need a silent retreat. You just need moments. Small pockets of intentional silence. Turn off the podcast on your commute. Put away your phone for five minutes. Sit with nothing but your breath.
It will feel strange at first. Your mind will race, looking for stimulation. That's withdrawal. It passes. On the other side is something you've forgotten existed: peace.
The Breath as Anchor
In the noise, the breath is your anchor. It's always there, beneath all the input. When the world gets loud, you can return to this one simple thing: the sensation of breathing.
One breath. Then another. The noise fades to background. The signal gets clearer. You remember what it feels like to be present in your own life, rather than constantly reacting to someone else's content.
Silence isn't empty. It's full of everything the noise has been hiding.