Silence saved my life

In my late 20s, I learned how to meditate.

Not because it was trendy,
but because something inside me was asking for quiet.

I needed grounding.
Stillness.
A way to quiet the noise.

Silence became my anchor.

When I was newly married at 30, my meditations changed.
What once felt light and calming became dark and heavy.

Something deep in my body and soul knew something was wrong.

Because I had trained myself to slow down and go inward, I listened.

I remember going to talk to my wife after a meditation and saying:
“Joanna, I think I have testicular cancer.”

No symptoms.
Just knowing.

I went to the doctor.
Stage 1 testicular cancer.

Seventeen radiation treatments later, I was one of the lucky ones.

I caught it early —
and I am deeply grateful and blessed for my wife, Joanna,
and our kids, Jacob and Aria.

I often wonder where I’d be today had I not invested in silence.

Today, silence is non-negotiable.

It’s how I ground myself.
It’s how I reconnect with my soul.
And it’s how I recalibrate in a world that never stops making noise.

Why silence matters more than ever:

• We check our phones nearly 100 times a day
• We’re interrupted every 3 minutes
• It takes 23 minutes to refocus

As I look ahead to 2026, I’m noticing something about myself.

When I rush, I lose the very thing that helped me listen in the first place.

So this is what I’m committing to:

Starting my day with silence.
Protecting a few one-minute pauses throughout the day.
Breathing.
Listening.
Letting things slow down so clarity can catch up.

One of the most meaningful things I read in 2025 wasn’t a tactic.
It was a belief.

In How to Make a Few Billion Dollars, Brad Jacobs shares how intentionally he built his life and work around stillness.

I recognized myself in that.

“Meditation is not a luxury. It’s a competitive advantage.” — Brad Jacobs

If your mind is already telling you that you don’t have a minute, that’s probably the exact reason you need one.