Researchers at the University of Virginia and Harvard University asked participants to sit quietly, without distractions, for 6 to 15 minutes. Most couldn’t do it. In a follow-up study, more than half chose to administer mild electric shocks rather than be alone with their thoughts, Science, 2014, 345(6192), 75–77.
It’s astonishing.
We long for peace, yet often avoid the very stillness that offers it. Our minds crave motion because motion feels like control. Stillness, on the other hand, reveals what we’ve been postponing: unprocessed emotions, the half-formed fears, the thoughts that rise in silence.
Why This Matters for Leaders
In emotionally complex environments, such as schools, universities, organizations, we ask others to pause, reflect, and regulate. But how often do we practice that for ourselves? If even a moment of unstructured quiet feels uncomfortable, it’s worth asking: What am I being invited to notice in this quiet?
Neuroscience shows that the brain’s default-mode network (DMN) is most active when we’re at rest, engaging in autobiographical memory, self-reflection, and meaning-making (Kim, 2012; Tripathi & Batta, 2025). In quiet moments, this network weaves together memory, identity, and experience, forming the backbone of our inner sense of self (Philippi et al., 2015; Lanius et al., 2020).
Meditation and intentional stillness help regulate the DMN. Research shows that stillness quiets mental chatter while improving emotional stability and reducing DMN reactivity (Berkovich-Ohana et al., 2012; Garrison et al., 2015; Ganesan et al., 2023). Stillness also strengthens the coordination between the DMN and the brain’s executive attention networks; it’s the balance that enables insight to arise (Taylor et al., 2013; Bauer et al., 2019).
Without moments of genuine rest, we remain efficient and productive but disconnected from ourselves. .
A Practice from the Inner Sage Toolkit
Next time you feel the impulse to fill a silence by checking your phone, scrolling, snacking, or fixing, try this:
- Pause. Notice what arises in the body before labeling it. (somatic awareness)
- Name the impulse. “I’m feeling restless.” (affect labeling)
- Stay for three breaths longer than feels easy. (calming response)
- Ask: What might this moment be trying to show me? (metacognition)
This simple shift interrupts the habitual chatter of the mind. It moves the nervous system from avoidance to investigation. And over time, that’s how our presence grows. I define presence as the ability to stay grounded, aware, and connected in the moment instead of being pulled into reflexive doing.
If you’d like to explore this more deeply, I recommend the Waking Up app by Sam Harris. Try the free 21-day introductory challenge of ten minutes daily. I’m not affiliated with Waking Up or with Sam Harris, but I’ve benefitted from my daily practice of 10 minute meditations.
Waking Up is a guided way to build the muscle of sitting with your thoughts. This small practice rewires our nervous systems
A Sage Question
“When was the last time you gave yourself permission to be still long enough to listen?”
Closing Reflection
As Donald Altman writes, “Mindfulness isn’t about escaping the noise; it’s about learning to rest within it.”
In leadership, that rest becomes a form of wisdom to restore clarity, empathy, and choice.
If this reflection on attention and intention resonates, join our next Inner Sage gathering to practice what we so often forget in the rush of leadership: slowing down, noticing, and choosing how we want to show up.
Upcoming Free Workshops
Resolving Emotional Reactivity
- Thursday, December 11th · Noon–1:00 PM PDT · via Zoom A workshop to practice emotional clarity and learn to pause, and move from reaction to intention. Just in time for the holidays! 👉 Registration
Raising the Quality of Conflict–free workshop
- Tuesday, January 13th · 4:00–5:00 PM PDT · via Zoom This workshop focuses on the inner work that shapes every conflict before a single word is spoken. When tension rises, your nervous system moves fast—your body tightens, your inner voice jumps in, and you shift into protection instead of connection. 👉 Registration
Coming January 2026
Resolving Emotional Reactivity Course Move from tension to trust through six guided sessions designed to restore connection, expand emotional capacity, and strengthen your leadership presence. 👉 Information and registration
The Art of Emotional Wisdom
This course deepens emotional awareness & relational intelligence from our foundational course, Resolving Emotional Reactivity. Guided practice supports participants in navigating boundaries, repairing trust, and engaging in conflict with curiosity and compassion.
