The Sacred Pause: Stillness in Leadership
We live in a world that
worships motion.
From childhood, we are
taught to keep ourselves busy—
To do something,
anything, lest we be labelled useless.
Even after retirement,
after decades of service,
The pressure persists:
from family, from society, and most of all, from within.
To stay engaged. To stay
relevant. To stay in motion.
But I ask:
Is it necessary to always
do something?
Can we not, at times,
simply be?
To pause in the
journey—not for reflection, not for meditation, not even for introspection—
But to do absolutely
nothing.
To sit like the dog in
the veranda, eyes closed.
Like the cow in the
field, silent and still.
Not thinking. Not
planning. Not striving.
Just existing.
This is not easy.
We have not been trained
for it.
Our minds resist it.
But in that pause lies a
profound truth—
A truth that cannot be
described, only experienced.
Doing Nothing While Doing
Everything:
Even in action, one can
cultivate stillness.
When working in an
organization, plan meticulously, monitor wisely—
But hold the feeling that
you are doing nothing.
Let the rhythm of the
work carry you.
Leave space for
emergence, for creativity, for grace.
You have set the
objective, devised the strategy, and begun execution—
Now let the river flow.
Like the river that
begins at the mountain’s peak,
It does not fight the
rocks—it finds its way.
It bends, bypasses,
nourishes, and eventually merges with the ocean.
So too must a leader
flow—solving problems, making decisions,
But never losing the
feeling of stillness within.
This stillness is not
contrary to struggle.
Struggle is inevitable—it
is part of life.
But we must ask: What are
we struggling for?
Struggle becomes noble
when it defends eternal values.
When truth, justice, or
compassion are challenged,
We must rise—not out of
ego, but out of conviction.
Struggle becomes
meaningful when it serves a goal greater than oneself:
• The Olympic runner striving for gold,
• The freedom fighter enduring hardship for liberation.
•
• Artist striving to express his art
These are sacred
struggles.
They elevate the human
spirit.
But not all struggles are
worthy.
Let us not waste our
energy on petty battles—
• Bargaining for vegetables, and fighting for parking
• Arguing endlessly on social media
• Competing for comfort or position.
These are distractions.
They shrink our vision
and drain our vitality.
The Dance of Stillness
and Struggle:
To live wisely is to know
when to struggle and when to be still.
To act with purpose, and
to pause with grace.
To flow like the river,
and rest like the cow.
To do everything, and
feel like you’ve done nothing.
And when you finally sit,
eyes closed,
Having struggled for what
matters,
And surrendered to what
doesn’t,
You may feel something
beyond joy, beyond satisfaction.
A truth that cannot be
named.
It is not the end of the
journey.
It is the beginning of
presence.
Dr. Mahendra Ingale @
Jalgaon on Jan 4, 2026
#ValueBasedLeadership
#EngineeringHeartBeats
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