This morning I woke to the sound of rain tapping against the window—not the dramatic storm kind, but the gentle, persistent type that makes you want to stay under the covers a little longer. I did. Ten more minutes of listening, of noticing how each drop had its own rhythm, its own small story of falling.
I've been thinking about the space between thoughts lately. Yesterday, I tried something small: instead of immediately reaching for my phone when I felt bored, I just sat. Just for two minutes. It was harder than I expected. My mind wanted to grab onto something, anything. A task. A worry. A plan. But I stayed with the restlessness, and something curious happened—it softened. Not disappeared, just... softened.
I made a mistake this week. I interrupted a friend mid-sentence because I thought I knew where their story was going. I didn't. When I realized what I'd done, I felt that familiar warmth in my cheeks. But instead of rushing to explain myself, I just said, "I'm sorry, I cut you off. Please continue." They did. And I learned something new about them I wouldn't have if I'd kept talking.
There's a difference between knowing about patience and practicing it. The first lives in books and good intentions. The second lives in small moments—waiting for water to boil, letting someone finish their thought, allowing yourself to not know the answer immediately.
What if boredom isn't the enemy we think it is? What if it's just space asking us to notice it?
Here's a tiny experiment if you're willing: tomorrow, when you're waiting—in line, for coffee to brew, for a page to load—instead of filling that gap, just notice it. Five seconds. What does waiting feel like in your body? No judgment, just curiosity.
#mindfulness #patience #presence #quietthoughts