A Whisper of Wholeness

In silence the mask falls. Slowly.


We all wear them. Not out of dishonesty — out of habit. Layer by layer, we've assembled a version of ourselves that knows what to say, how to show up, what face to wear in which room. Some of these layers were chosen. Others just accumulated — a response here, a performance there, a posture we held so long it began to feel like skin. We don't usually think of it as a mask. It just feels like getting through the day. And in the noise of all that getting-through, the mask stays perfectly in place. It has to. The noise keeps it there.

But silence does something that nothing else can. It stops holding the mask in place. Not all at once — there's no dramatic unveiling, no sudden moment of exposure. Just a slow release, like something loosening that you didn't know was tight. The first time I sat long enough in real silence, I didn't discover some hidden truth. I just noticed how much effort I'd been spending to keep everything in place. That noticing was the beginning. Silence doesn't rip anything away. It simply makes it safe enough for what is real to outlast what is performed. And as the beauty reveals itself, you realize what falls away was never yours to begin with.

For further reflection
If I sat in ten minutes of complete silence today — no agenda, no task, no noise — what might I notice about what I've been holding in place?


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A Whisper of Integrity

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