There is a peculiar paradox about being human.
We spend our lives learning how to navigate the world, yet very little time learning how to navigate ourselves.
From the moment we enter school, we are taught to observe everything outside us. We learn to analyse, compare, compete, measure and perform. We study history, science, economics and technology. We learn to solve equations, build careers and cultivate relationships. Yet almost nowhere are we taught the one skill that quietly determines the quality of every experience we will ever have—the ability to observe our own mind.
Perhaps that is why so many people who appear successful outwardly feel strangely disconnected inwardly.
They have mastered the art of living, but not necessarily the art of being.
I often wonder how different our lives might have been had we been taught, as children, not merely to think, but to notice our thinking. Not merely to express emotions, but to understand them. Not merely to acquire knowledge, but to inquire into the one who is acquiring it.
That, perhaps, is the education humanity has forgotten.
As a child, I wasn’t a loner, but a quiet child.
I enjoyed friendships, laughter and the ordinary rhythms of growing up. Yet somewhere beneath those experiences lived a quiet awareness that I could never quite explain. Even when surrounded by people, I sensed an invisible distance—not from others, but from the versions of myself that seemed to emerge in different situations.
The quiet child eventually became the vibrant adult.
People often describe me as energetic, expressive and deeply engaging. They experience someone who can hold space, tell stories, facilitate transformation and effortlessly connect with a room full of strangers.
Must Read: Why spiritual intelligence matters in an age of noise
What most people don’t see is the invisible architecture beneath that presence.
For years, I had unknowingly become an expert performer.
Not in the theatrical sense, but in the deeply human sense of adapting to survive.
Like many of us, I learnt to become what each situation required. Different rooms invited different identities. Different relationships demanded different responses. Different expectations quietly sculpted different versions of me.
The adaptation was so seamless that I hardly noticed it happening.
Until my body did.
After social gatherings, I often returned home inexplicably exhausted. Not physically tired, but inwardly depleted. It puzzled me because I genuinely enjoyed people. Yet there was always a lingering sense that somewhere between belonging and being accepted, I had drifted away from something profoundly important.
My own centre.
Looking back now, I realise that exhaustion was not caused by conversation.
It was caused by separation. The distance between who I was and who I believed I needed to be. Many of us know this distance intimately. We smile while carrying grief. We achieve while quietly questioning our worth. We nurture others while neglecting ourselves. We become so fluent in the language of competence that we lose touch with the language of authenticity.
Society seldom questions this. In fact, it often rewards it.
We applaud resilience without asking what pain made resilience necessary. We celebrate productivity without noticing the nervous systems quietly collapsing beneath relentless achievement. We admire confidence without wondering how much of it is armour.
Somewhere along the way, performance becomes identity. The mask becomes the face. And because everyone else appears to be doing the same, we mistake collective conditioning for normalcy.
For many years, I too believed that this was simply how adulthood worked.
Until spirituality entered my life.
Or perhaps more truthfully, until life gently dismantled enough illusions for spirituality to reveal itself. Contrary to popular perception, spirituality did not arrive wrapped in rituals or beliefs. It did not ask me to abandon the world or withdraw from responsibility. It did something far more unsettling.
It invited me to observe. Not the world, bu myself.
The invitation sounded deceptively simple.
“Who are you when you stop performing?”
At first, the question felt philosophical. Later, it became deeply personal. Eventually, it became impossible to ignore.
The more honestly I observed myself, the more I realised how much of my life had been governed by unconscious patterns – habits of thought, inherited beliefs, emotional reflexes and invisible fears that had quietly shaped my choices for decades.
The most profound discoveries were rarely about the world around me. They were about the world within me. And perhaps that is where every genuine spiritual journey begins.
It didn’t begin with certainty, but with courageous curiosity – not with answers, but with the willingness to remain in the presence of an uncomfortable questions. Was I seeing who I was, who I was becoming, who am I when I was with myself and was I honouring my truth?
For centuries, sages, mystics and contemplatives across cultures have spoken about this inward turning. They described it as awakening, witnessing, self-inquiry or simply remembering our essential nature.
“Your own Self-realization is the greatest service you can render the world.”
— Ramana Maharshi
Today, neuroscience is beginning to describe a similar phenomenon through a different vocabulary called metacognition – the remarkable human capacity to become aware of our own thinking.
Ancient wisdom called it the Witness. Modern science calls it observing the mind.
Different languages, yet the same concept and hidden within that lies the quiet revolution our world is longing for.
The Mind That Can Watch Itself
“The greatest journey you will ever undertake is not around the world. It is into yourself.”
What if the greatest leap in human evolution was not the ability to think, but the ability to observe our thinking?
It is a deceptively simple distinction.
Most of us spend our lives believing that we are our thoughts. We identify with every inner dialogue, every emotion, every memory and every fear. The voice in our head becomes our narrator, our critic, our protector and, eventually, our identity.
“I am anxious.”
“I am not good enough.”
“I always fail.”
“They don’t understand me.”
These sentences feel factual because we repeat them often enough. Over time, they become less like thoughts and more like truths. Yet there is a profound question that quietly changes everything.
If I can observe my thoughts, who is the one doing the observing?
This question has echoed through the Upanishads, Buddhist monasteries, Sufi poetry and contemplative traditions for thousands of years. Long before psychology emerged as a discipline, sages invited seekers to discover the Sakshi – the Witness Consciousness that silently observes every experience without becoming entangled in it.
In the Yoga Sutras, this witnessing presence is reflected in the concept of the Drashta—the Seer who remains untouched by the fluctuations of the mind. Meditation was never intended to suppress thought; it was meant to reveal that awareness itself is larger than thought.
Modern neuroscience approaches the same mystery through a different doorway.
It calls this remarkable capacity metacognition – thinking about thinking, or more precisely, becoming aware of our own mental processes.
At first glance, metacognition may appear to be an academic concept discussed in psychology classrooms and research laboratories. In reality, it is one of the most transformative capacities available to the human mind. It enables us to notice when our attention has wandered, recognise our cognitive biases, question our assumptions, regulate emotional reactions and consciously choose how we respond instead of reacting automatically.
Metacognition is not merely a higher cognitive skill. It is the beginning of inner freedom.
The moment we realise that a thought is simply a thought, not an unquestionable command, we create a small but profound space between stimulus and response.
Within that space lies choice and within that choice lies transformation.
Perhaps Viktor Frankl expressed this truth most elegantly when he wrote that between stimulus and response there is a space, and in that space lies our freedom. While psychology explores this as cognitive flexibility, spiritual traditions have long understood it as the awakening of awareness.
This is where spirituality and neuroscience begin to converse rather than compete.
One speaks the language of consciousness, while the other speaks the language of cognition.Both are pointing toward the extraordinary human ability to witness experience without being completely defined by it.
Ironically, we live in an age of unprecedented information yet diminishing introspection. Our attention has become one of the world’s most contested resources. Every notification, advertisement, algorithm and headline competes for the limited bandwidth of the human mind. We have become experts at consuming information while gradually losing the capacity to sit quietly with ourselves.
Silence has become uncomfortable.
Stillness feels unfamiliar.
The absence of distraction is often mistaken for emptiness or boredom. Yet it is precisely in that apparent emptiness that the deepest conversations with ourselves begin.
Neuroscientists have identified a network of interconnected brain regions that becomes particularly active when the mind is not focused on an external task. This is known as the Default Mode Network (DMN). It is involved in autobiographical memory, self-reflection, imagining the future and constructing the narrative we call “me.” The DMN is not our enemy. It is an essential part of how we make sense of our lives. But when left unchecked, it can become a relentless storyteller, replaying regrets from the past, rehearsing fears about the future and reinforcing identities that no longer serve us.
How many times have we mistaken that internal narration for reality?
How often have we believed that because a thought feels familiar, it must also be true?
This is where self-inquiry becomes more than philosophical reflection. It becomes an act of liberation.
The purpose of self-inquiry is not to eliminate thought, but to become intimate with it. To notice recurring patterns. To recognise inherited beliefs that were never consciously chosen. To observe emotional reactions without immediately obeying them. To ask, with humility and courage, “Is this thought an accurate reflection of reality, or is it simply an old story my mind has become accustomed to telling?”
Awareness does not demand perfection. It asks only for brutal honesty that can be deeply uncomfortable.
There are moments when we discover that the identities we have carefully built are sustained by fear rather than truth. The achiever may be seeking approval. The caregiver may be afraid of rejection. The perfectionist may be protecting a wounded sense of worth. The endlessly busy professional may simply be avoiding the silence in which unresolved questions begin to surface.
To witness these patterns without judgment is one of the most courageous acts a human being can undertake. You must remind yourself that this is not self-criticism, but self-illumination.
Ancient wisdom traditions often described this process as removing the veils that obscure our true nature. Contemporary psychology speaks of increasing self-awareness and cognitive flexibility. Different disciplines offer different maps, yet they point toward the same landscape: a life lived with greater consciousness rather than greater compulsion.
When we repeatedly observe our thoughts instead of unconsciously inhabiting them, something remarkable begins to happen. The brain itself demonstrates an extraordinary capacity to adapt. Through the process of neuroplasticity, repeated patterns of attention and reflection can strengthen new neural pathways while allowing less helpful habitual patterns to gradually weaken.
In other words, what we repeatedly attend to begins to shape not only our perception of reality but the architecture of the brain itself.
This offers a hopeful insight.
Transformation is not reserved for the extraordinary. It is available through ordinary moments of conscious attention, repeated with sincerity.
Every time we pause before reacting…
Every time we think before speaking…
Every time we analyse our own behaviour…
Every time we question an inherited belief…
Every time we choose curiosity over certainty…
Every time we return our attention to the present moment…
we participate in the quiet rewiring of both mind and being.
Perhaps this is why every authentic spiritual path begins not with changing the world, but with observing the one who is trying to change it.
Because before we can transform our relationships, our organisations, our communities or our society, we must first become acquainted with the landscape from which every action arises.
Our own consciousness.
The revolution, it turns out, is neither loud nor dramatic. It begins in a single, almost imperceptible moment – the moment we realise that we have a mind, but that we are more than the mind. And once that realisation takes root, the journey is no longer about acquiring a new identity. It becomes the gentle, lifelong unfolding of remembering the one that was always there.
“Let a man lift himself by himself; let him not degrade himself. For the Self alone is the friend of the self, and the Self alone is the enemy of the self.”
— Bhagavad Gita
There is a reason why genuine self-inquiry remains one of the rarest human pursuits. It asks us to relinquish certainty before we receive clarity. It invites us to conquer ego and sit with discomfort before we discover peace. It asks us to question identities we have spent a lifetime constructing and to confront the stories that have quietly governed our choices. While many long for transformation, far fewer are willing to endure the quiet dismantling that transformation demands.
The inward journey is not reserved for the intellectually gifted, the spiritually inclined, or those who retreat from the world. It is available to every human being. Yet not everyone chooses it; not because the path is hidden, but because it asks of us something our outward-driven culture seldom celebrates: unwavering honesty, humility, patience, and the courage to remain present when our deepest truths begin to surface.
More than two thousand years ago, the Katha Upanishad expressed this timeless insight with remarkable simplicity:
“Nāyam ātmā balahīnena labhyaḥ.”
“The Self is not attained by one who lacks inner strength.”
Perhaps the sages were not speaking of physical strength at all. They were speaking of the quiet courage to observe without turning away, to question without clinging to easy answers, and to remain steadfast through the profound unlearning that every authentic awakening requires.
For the greatest act of courage is not to conquer the world outside us. It is to meet, with unwavering awareness, the world within. And perhaps that is where every genuine awakening begins. So ask yourself, “Do I have the courage to begin this journey?”.