His fingers hovered over the keyboard. Then he remembered his hands
The email arrived like a slap. Accusations. Demands. His first instinct was to fire back — defend, explain, justify. His fingers hovered over the keyboard, the first brain in full command. Then he remembered the gesture.
He placed his hands in his lap, right palm over left, thumbs gently touching. Dhyana Mudra. The mudra of meditation. He took one full breath, letting the exhale be longer than the inhale. And in that single breath, the impulse to react loosened its grip.
He asked himself: “Am I reacting, or am I responding?” The answer was clear. The email was still open, but the anger had dissolved. He wrote a short, calm reply — not from weakness, but from a place of quiet strength. The second brain had spoken.
Parable of the Bow
A warrior was insulted in the marketplace. His hand went to his sword. An old archer standing nearby said quietly, “An arrow released in anger always misses its mark. But one released from stillness — that arrow finds the center.” The warrior paused, his hand still on the hilt, and slowly released his grip. He walked away, not because he was weak, but because he had chosen his moment. The arrow that never flew had won the battle.
That day, he learned that the space between a trigger and a response is where Wu Wei lives. It’s not a void. It’s a door. And a simple hand gesture, held for one breath, can open it.
🧭 One breath, one gesture — the reaction ends, the response begins.
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