Three Silences • Presence Practice • Theologic Method
Medium Silence Awareness

Three Silences

A structured sequence: silence for sound, silence for thoughts, silence for the body. The point is not calm — it’s contact.

How it works

~4–7 minutes
  • Silence 1: hear what is already there
  • Silence 2: notice thought as event
  • Silence 3: feel the body as ground
Clarification: “Silence” doesn’t mean “make everything quiet.” It means: stop adding commentary for a moment. Let the world arrive unedited.

If you can, set a gentle timer for 4–7 minutes. Otherwise, we’ll just pace it together. If you drift, you’re not failing—you’re noticing where attention goes.

Silence 1 — sound

Listen for what’s already happening. Don’t hunt. Don’t label. Just hear: near sounds, far sounds, and the “room tone.”

  • Close: breath, clothing, keyboard, footsteps
  • Far: traffic, voices, wind, appliances
  • Room tone: the baseline hum of “being here”

Silence 2 — thoughts

Notice thoughts as events, like sounds in the mind. A thought appears, lingers, changes, and leaves.

  • Label: “planning,” “rehearsing,” “judging,” “remembering”
  • No arguing, no finishing, no “fixing”
  • Return to simple noticing

Silence 3 — body

Feel the body as ground. Not a project. Not a problem. A living fact beneath the mind.

  • Feet, seat, hands, jaw, shoulders
  • Temperature, pressure, pulse, breath
  • One place. Stay with it.

The point (in one line)

You’re building a simple skill: contact without commentary—first with sound, then thought, then body.

Copy & paste prompt

Tip: On desktop, click in the box and press Cmd/Ctrl + A then Cmd/Ctrl + C, or use the buttons.

Presence Practices • TheologicMethod.com
Use this when you want awareness without performance: three simple “silences,” three kinds of contact.
Copied