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The phone is still face-down on the other side of the room. The laptop has not been opened. The notifications have not arrived yet — or they have arrived, but silently, into a space you are not occupying. The first demand has not been made. The first question has not been asked. The first thing that needs your attention is still waiting, patient, unaware that you are awake.
This is the gap. The few minutes that exist between sleep and the day’s shape taking hold. Not dramatic. Not large. Just a small opening in the schedule where nothing is required of you yet.
You are sitting. Not doing. Just sitting. The chair is holding you. Your breath is moving in and out without you managing it. The room is dim — not dark, not bright, just the early grey that comes before the light decides what kind of day it will be. And in this grey, in this gap, there is no urgency. There is nothing you have failed to do yet because the day has not asked you to do anything.
The quiet is not empty. It is full of small sounds you do not usually hear. The hum of something electrical in the next room. The faint creak of the house settling. Your own breath. These sounds were always here. But usually you are moving too fast to notice them. Usually you are already halfway into the first task by the time you open your eyes.
But not this morning. This morning you are here first. Before the task. Before the list. Before the momentum builds and carries you forward into the hours that will ask things of you.
No one is calling your name yet. No one needs you to decide anything. No one is waiting for you to finish something you said you would finish. The people in the house are still asleep, or they are awake but have not yet reached the point in their morning where they need you to be anything other than what you are right now, which is: here. Still. Not moving toward the next thing.
This will not last. In ten minutes, maybe less, the gap will close. Someone will wake. Something will need your attention. The phone will light up. The list will form in your head. The day will begin making its shape and you will step into that shape because that is what you do.
But the gap is still open. The silence is still here. And you are in it. Not using it. Not filling it. Just letting it be what it is — a pause. A breath. A moment that belongs to no one.
You are not meditating. You are not practising anything. You are not trying to be present or centred or any of the words that turn a simple moment into a task. You are just sitting in a chair in a dim room while the house is quiet and the day has not started asking things of you.
The stillness is not something you made. It was here already. You just stopped moving long enough to notice it.