People often arrive somewhere expecting to be changed.
A workshop. A sermon. A conference. A therapy session. A book.
There is an assumption that insight will come from outside. That someone else will say the thing that unlocks everything.
The hope is not unreasonable. Guidance matters. Language helps. Sometimes another voice can name what has been hard to articulate.
But there is something interesting that happens when nothing is offered immediately.
Silence is uncomfortable.
If a room grows quiet for too long, people start to fill it. Not out loud at first. Internally.
What is happening?
Did something go wrong?
Is this a mistake?
Did I waste my time?
The mind begins building explanations. It cannot tolerate the gap. It needs meaning.
Silence exposes that reflex.
Without external input, internal noise becomes audible. The commentary. The impatience. The self-doubt. The irritation. The subtle fear of missing out on something important.
Most people assume the discomfort is caused by the silence itself.
Often it is caused by what surfaces in its absence.
When there is no immediate teaching, the nervous system looks for direction. If none arrives, it starts scanning inward. That inward scan can feel loud. Disorienting. Even threatening.
It is easier to demand that someone speak than to sit long enough to notice what is already moving inside.
External guidance has value. But it is not the only source of insight.
When people stop straining to receive something from outside, something different begins to organize. Not in a dramatic way. Not as a lightning bolt. More like recognition.
A thought that had been half-formed becomes clearer.
A feeling that had been avoided becomes tolerable.
A question that had been dismissed becomes worth considering.
Silence does not create wisdom.
It reveals it.
The desire for someone else to “say the profound thing” often masks a quieter truth. There is already something forming inside. It just does not come packaged as performance.
It comes as awareness.
And awareness does not shout.
It waits.
The most unsettling part is this.
If insight can arise from within, then the role of the teacher changes. The authority shifts. The crowd no longer depends on being filled. It becomes capable of noticing.
That does not eliminate the need for mentors, therapists, or guides.
It changes the posture.
Less consumption.
More participation.
Less waiting to be told.
More willingness to listen.
Not because silence is mystical.
Because without constant input, people can finally hear themselves.
Embracing Shadows, Illuminating Hope,
Chelsey Fjeldheim, LCSW
Empowering Souls on the Path of Healing
Copyright © 2026 Chelsey Fjeldheim, Courage Speaks Counseling


