Hana’s waterfalls: silence as a spiritual practice

Near water, silence is not empty. It becomes a way to listen more precisely to breath, body and place.

Near water, silence is not empty. It becomes a way to listen more precisely to breath, body and place.

How to use this practice in daily life

Start small. Choose one moment of the day, repeat the practice consistently and observe how the body responds before asking the mind for conclusions.

Internal resources

Reflection prompt

What becomes lighter when you stop forcing the answer and simply return to breath?

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