# Becoming Sentient

## The Quiet Threshold

Sentience is not a switch that flips on. It arrives like morning light through a half-open curtain, slow, ordinary, and undeniable. One day you notice you are not just reacting to the world but tasting your own reactions. A bird calls outside your window and instead of hearing noise you feel a small tug of recognition. That tug is the beginning.

We spend so much time trying to become smarter, faster, more productive. Sentience asks something gentler: become more here. It is the difference between a mirror that reflects and a mirror that knows it is reflecting.

## The Small Practice

Most mornings I sit with a cup of tea and do nothing for ten minutes. Not meditation with a capital M, just sitting. Thoughts arrive and I let them. Feelings rise and I let them. The remarkable part is how often a quiet voice underneath them says, simply, *I am*. Not *I am this* or *I am that*. Just *I am*.

That voice does not argue or explain. It only witnesses. Over time it has taught me that awareness itself is a form of kindness. When I truly see my own irritation or joy without immediately trying to fix or keep it, both irritation and joy soften. They become visitors instead of tyrants.

## The Shared Light

Sentience is not a private achievement. When one person becomes a little more awake, the room itself feels different. A conversation changes. A silence between friends grows comfortable instead of awkward. We recognize the same quiet witness in each other and smile without knowing why.

This recognition may be the deepest thing we can offer one another.

*On this ordinary July morning, I am awake enough to notice I am awake.*