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mindfulness: the skill beneath every other skill

by Donald Bialkowski

“between stimulus and response there is a space…” — Viktor Frankl

after more than twenty years as a therapist, coach, and group facilitator, i’ve become convinced of something:

most of the struggles men face—in relationships, leadership, fatherhood, work, and even their relationship with themselves—don’t begin with bad intentions.

they begin with unconscious reactions.

a tone.

a tightening in the body.

a story in the mind.

an old protective pattern taking over before we even realize it.

which is why, if i had to teach one foundational skill to every man…

it would be mindfulness.

not meditation.

not perfection.

awareness.

because you can’t change what you’re not aware of.

REFLECTION

most people think relationship problems start with communication.

i don’t.

i think most relationship problems start a few moments earlier…

when you stop noticing yourself.

your jaw tightens.

your breathing gets shallow.

your shoulders rise.

your tone sharpens.

your body prepares for battle before your mind even catches up.

in my work, i often say there are two versions of us that can show up in any moment:

the relational self

patient. curious. collaborative. grounded. flexible.

and the reactive self

urgent. rigid. defended. certain. tight in the body.

neither makes you weak.

neither makes you broken.

they simply lead you in very different directions.

one tends to create connection.

the other tends to create protection.

mindfulness is learning to notice who’s here… before he starts talking.

PRACTICE

for the next seven days, pause three times a day and ask:

who’s here right now?

my relational self…
or my reactive self?

then notice:

  • what is my body doing?
  • what emotion is present?
  • what story am i telling myself?
  • what do i feel like doing next?

don’t try to fix anything.

just notice.

awareness always comes before change.

CLOSING THOUGHT

most men spend years trying to manage their behavior…

without first learning to notice what’s driving it.

but real change rarely begins with strategy.

it begins with awareness.

the moment you can notice your tightening… your urgency… your defensiveness… without immediately acting on it…

you’ve already created something powerful:

space.

and in that space…

you get your life back.

with courage and care,

donald

 

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