Breathing reveals the essential work of awakening: when respiration runs on the midbrain’s automatic rhythm, much of life follows suit—thoughts, emotions, and behaviors moving mechanically while the mind mistakes this automaticity for authentic presence.
This shared inertia is what mystics call sleep, a collective trance so pervasive that few feel any urgency to question it.
Awakening requires sacred friction—the meeting of the body’s habitual impulse towards mechanical life with the mind’s intentional counter-impulse towards consciousness.
In the simple act of choosing a breath, command shifts from the automatic to the aware; two forces meet, and sparks of self-remembering appear.