04/01/2026
Lately, I’ve been noticing that when I sit or lie down in meditation, answers start to come.
Clarity about next steps. A sense of direction.
Things I couldn’t resolve through action, analysis, or searching for solutions begin to make sense when I stop and simply stay present. Without trying to fix anything. Without trying to understand or change something.
It’s often in these moments that unexpected insights appear. New perspectives. A very clear knowing of where to move next.
And at the same time, it can be difficult. Especially in periods of uncertainty, when you want results, when you want something to finally shift. The mind becomes very active, constantly looking for answers. We try again and again to think, plan, calculate.
In those moments, choosing to stop is not easy.
To sit. To be. To do nothing.
Yet this is often what creates deeper and faster change than any external attempt to “fix” things.
Right now, I meditate every day for about 20 minutes. This is part of the practices from the book I’ve written. The book is finished, and I’m currently rereading it and making final edits.
All the practices, the entire system I describe there, I’m moving through again myself.
The idea to gather everything into a system and write this book came not from a desire to teach others, but from what I kept seeing on my own path and in working with people: we almost always know what’s right for us. That knowing is already there. But our access to it, our trust in it, or our inner state can be blocked.
We often look for answers outside, as if someone else knows better. I wanted to create not a set of advice, but a process that helps you return to yourself again and again. To your own sense, your own inner knowing, and your own power. Without constant reliance on external guidance.
And this is what I continue to practice myself. Returning. Reconnecting with the knowledge and power that are always within us, even when access to them isn’t clear.