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I choose to return, again and again, to the one thing that is here.

The Morning That Wouldn’t Settle
I sat down this morning with my coffee still too hot to drink, and before I’d even taken a full breath my mind had already drafted two emails, replayed a conversation from yesterday, and started worrying about a dentist appointment next week. The usual circus. I noticed it the way you notice a ceiling fan that’s been spinning—suddenly aware it had been going the whole time. I set the mug on the table, felt the ceramic warm under my fingers, and tried to just be with the breath. It lasted maybe four seconds before the next thought swooped in. Four honest seconds.
What struck me was how little frustration I felt about it. There was a time—years, really—when a scattered sit like that would have made me want to quit the cushion entirely. Today it just felt like weather. Cloudy, a little gusty, nothing personal. I kept coming back. Not with force, not with some ironclad “concentrate harder” energy, but more the way you’d guide a toddler back from the edge of a puddle. Gently. Again. Again. The coffee cooled. I drank it. The sits kept being imperfect, and I kept staying.
A Small Experiment at the Desk
Later, at my desk, I tried something I haven’t done in a while. I closed every tab except one. Just the document I needed to work on, the cursor blinking at me like a patient friend. It felt almost physically uncomfortable—like a low hum of withdrawal from the constant toggling I’d gotten used to. I noticed my hand reach for the phone twice in the first ten minutes. Not because anything was happening on it. Just because reaching was the habit.
I didn’t scold the hand. I just watched it, set the phone face-down on the other side of the room, and came back to the single open page. And something did shift. Not dramatically—no lightning bolt of clarity—but a quiet settling, like sediment drifting to the bottom of a glass of water. The words came a little easier. The thinking felt less like grasping and more like listening. I realized that focus isn’t really about effort. It’s about willingness. Willingness to let go of the nine other things tugging at the sleeve, even when they feel urgent, even when they promise to be more interesting than the one task in front of me.
What the Afternoon Taught Me About Concentration
By mid-afternoon, the scatteredness crept back. Of course it did. I was tired, the light through the window had that heavy golden quality that makes everything feel like it’s winding down, and my body wanted to be done. I caught myself scrolling through headlines without reading any of them—just the motion of it, the thumb moving like a metronome. I stopped. Set the phone down again. Sat with the tiredness instead.
And here’s the thing I keep re-learning, the thing that apparently needs to be learned fresh every single time: concentration isn’t a state I achieve and then hold. It’s a practice of returning. The whole game is the return. Every time I noticed I’d drifted—from the breath, from the document, from the actual moment I was living—and chose to come back, that was the practice. Not the sustained, unbroken beam of attention I sometimes imagine I should have. Just the return. Sharon Salzberg once said something about how the moment you realize you’ve been distracted is actually the magic moment, because that’s when you get to practice beginning again. I felt that today in my bones, not just my head. The beginning again isn’t the failure. It’s the whole point.
Softening Into the Return
Tonight, sitting for the last few minutes before writing this, I tried to hold focus the way you’d hold something alive—a small bird, maybe. Firm enough to keep it safe, loose enough not to crush it. The breath was there. The sounds of the neighborhood were there—someone’s dog, a car door, the particular silence between those sounds. My mind wandered, and I came back. It wandered again, and I came back again. There was no peak experience, no transcendent stillness. Just a deepening sense of kindness toward the whole messy, beautiful process of trying to pay attention in a world that is constantly, lovingly, pulling us in every direction at once.
If any of this sounds familiar to you—the scattered mornings, the restless hands, the late-afternoon drift—maybe just try the one thing that helped me today. Not forcing focus, but softening into it. Closing one tab. Setting one thing down. Returning one more time than you think you can. That’s more than enough. That’s everything.