Activate Your Stillness
THE PRACTICE
Key Takeaways
Stillness is an active choice that helps the nervous system settle and restore clarity.
Insight follows safety; perception widens when the system stops bracing.
Brief, intentional pauses interrupt compulsive patterns and make room for something deeper.
Theme
Stillness can be mistaken for disengagement or avoidance. In reality, it’s spiritual technology for regulation, peace, and grounding.
Mini Teaching
Nervous systems heal in stillness, through regulation, not constant effort. When things feel uncertain or overwhelming, the impulse and messaging is to speed up, fix, distract, or numb. But clear insight doesn’t emerge under pressure. It blossoms in a system that feels safe enough to stop bracing or performing. Stillness is an active choice that requires prioritization, a sense of value, habit, a place, and a plan. When chosen, it’s the condition that interrupts compulsion and allows clarity to return. Stillness creates the conditions to notice what’s already trying to reach you.
Practice
Notice this…
How often this week you rush, reach for stimulation, or try to solve something immediately.
How you feel when your mind, body, or world is still.
Reflect on this…
What options are you missing by [re]acting too quickly?
Try this…
Once a day, take three minutes of intentional stillness. Set a timer and just observe what arises without judgment. Focus on:
» Externalization: keep your eyes open, breathe, and acknowledge everything your senses tell you about the world, or
» Internalization: close your eyes and check in with your mind, body, and emotions below the surface.
Don’t try to fix, change, or optimize anything. Just sit, breathe, and accept while your system settles.
Integration
The next time a stimulus arises, write down your reaction. Set your clock for three minutes, practice your stillness exercise, and then note your response after settling. Did it change?
CTA
If you want the deeper reflection behind this practice, revisit this week’s Flash.
With love & light,
John Moos, MD
Soul Surgeon