The Art of Wanting Things Quietly
Desire used to come with urgency. When you wanted something, the wanting was loud, insistent, impatient, full of the energy that comes from feeling like not having the thing is a kind of emergency. You pursued what you wanted with intensity, and if you didn't get it, the disappointment was proportional to the volume of the wanting. Over time, something changed in the texture of desire itself. You didn't stop wanting things, but the wanting became more like a direction, and less like something you needed to chase and more like something you were already moving toward, slowly, in your own time. This quieter wanting feels different in the body. There's less tension in it, less clenching, and grasping quality that urgent desire carries. Instead, there's open awareness, a knowing of what you'd like your life to include, held loosely enough that it doesn't become a source of suffering when it doesn't arrive on schedule. The shift is about changing your relat...