Silence is steady.
| | In conversations, especially high-stakes ones, there's a common impulse: | To overexplain. | To soften our stance. | To fill every pause so no one questions our position. | But here's the truth: | Power doesn't live in how much you say... | It lives in how well you hold your ground. | When you feel the need to justify, you shrink. | When you rush to clarify, you lose clarity. | And when you fill space out of fear, you forfeit control. | The most respected people don't say much. | They mean what they say. | And then they stop talking. | They don't explain twice. | They don't dilute their boundaries with apologies. | They trust their position…because it's been chosen deliberately. | That's the energy of someone who commands the conversation, | without needing to dominate it. | It's in the tone. | The posture. | The stillness between words. | And most importantly, the confidence to let silence carry what your voice doesn't have to. | So here's your challenge this week: | In your next difficult conversation, say less. | No justifying. No excessive explanation. No shrinking to be agreeable. | Let your tone stay level. | Let your eye contact remain steady. | Say what needs to be said…clearly, directly, respectfully. | Then stop. | And let your silence be the punctuation mark. | Because when you hold your ground without flinching, | you don't need to prove anything. | You are the proof. | To your greatness, | -James Michael Sama | P.S.: If you're looking for a private advisor to help you develop these qualities, let's talk. | |
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