It is easy to blame the phone. The endless scrolling, the constant notifications, the reflex of reaching for it in silence. But the deeper truth is less about technology and more about avoidance. The phone has simply become a convenient hiding place.
Many people do not pick up their phones because they are curious. They pick them up because stillness feels uncomfortable. Silence creates space, and space brings questions we are not always ready to answer. So we fill it. We distract it. We outsource our attention.
In leadership, this pattern is even more pronounced. The modern leader is expected to be constantly available, constantly responsive, constantly “on.” Yet in that constant engagement, reflection is often the first casualty. Decisions become reactive rather than rooted. Presence becomes fragmented. And over time, even effectiveness suffers because clarity requires inner reflection.
Self-awareness begins where distraction ends. It requires the courage to look within, and around us. To notice what we are feeling when we reach for the screen without thinking. To ask what thought or emotion we are avoiding in that moment. The same applies outwardly: when we are not present to people, we miss cues, meanings, and truths that do not announce themselves loudly.
There is also an inner voice most of us gradually drown out. It is not loud. It does not compete. It waits. And when we listen to it, something settles. Direction becomes clearer. Noise reduces. Peace is no longer something we chase but something we return to.
Perhaps the real discipline is not putting the phone down. It is picking ourselves up long enough to listen.
Because in the end, we are not trying to escape technology. We are trying to find peace! That comes from listening; listening to our inner voice.





