Congrats, you gave yourself fifteen minutes. In these times, that's no small thing.
In a world that constantly pulls attention outward, you chose to turn toward something quieter.
Before doing anything else, pause for a moment and acknowledge that.
You practiced.
Not perfectly.
Not performatively.
Simply by showing up.
That matters.
The value of listening is not only in the meditation itself.
It is in what you notice afterward.
You do not need to answer these questions in a polished way.
You do not need to write anything down unless you want to.
Just let them land.
Was there a moment where listening came naturally?
Where your attention rested without strain?
Did your mind want to move?
Did impatience surface?
Did silence feel exposed?
Did sound feel overwhelming?
Nothing is wrong. This is just the question that is alive right now.
Was there a sound you had not noticed before?
A reaction you did not expect?
A shift in your body?
On a particular sound?
On your breathing?
On internal commentary?
When did attention drift?
What pulled it?
Noticing where you fade is part of listening.
Silence?
Texture?
Your internal response?
The space between sounds?
How might a small shift in the way you listen change something in your life right now?
Not in a dramatic way.
Just slightly.
In conversation.
In decision making.
In creative work.
In conflict.
In rest.
Listening alters timing.
And timing changes response.
Listening carefully is the first step in the Holy Trinity of Improv:
Listen.
Feel.
Play.
You have just practiced the first movement.
If you would like to explore the next step in this practice, continue on to the next lesson.
There is no rush.
But if something in you is curious, follow it.
Practice it with sound.
Play it in your day.
From here to there and back.
PlayYourWay.us
You should never be exiled from your own nature.