đ The Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle
The Power of Now quietly taught me how to live a less worried, more present life.
Thatâs why I want to talk about this book I recently finished â The Power of Now. Iâd heard people mention it before, but I never really paid attention. It always seemed a bit too spiritual or abstract to me, to be honest.
But a few weeks ago, my mind just wouldnât stop. I was lying in bed, exhausted, but my thoughts were running wild â old conversations, weird future worries, to-do lists I hadnât even written down yet. Then I remembered this book. And I thought, âWhy not give it a shot?â
Did it change my life overnight?
No. But something shifted.
It helped me notice things Iâd been too busy â or too distracted â to see before.
What it’s really about
At its core, this book is about a simple (but not easy) truth: most of our pain comes from not being present. Weâre often stuck in the past or anxious about the future. And in that process, we completely miss the only moment thatâs actually real â now.
Tolle doesnât scream this message at you. He just walks you through it patiently, reminding you â again and again â that being present isnât just a nice idea. Itâs everything.
What stayed with me
1. Iâm not my mind
This might be obvious to some people, but it was a big one for me. I always thought that whatever was happening in my head was me. But Tolle says we are actually the awareness behind those thoughts. And somehow, that idea made me feel calmer â like I didnât have to believe every worried or negative thought that popped up.
2. The pain-body is real
He talks about something called the âpain-bodyâ â basically emotional baggage we carry from the past. I saw it in myself more than I expected. Like, when I reacted strongly to something small, and only later realized it wasnât really about that moment â it was something old being triggered.
3. Time isnât the problem â our obsession with it is
We obviously need time to plan, work, do life. But thereâs a kind of âpsychological timeâ where we live inside our heads â always stuck in what could happen, or what shouldâve happened. I realized Iâd spent so many hours lost in things that didnât even exist. Just noticing that helped me slow down a little.
4. Stillness isnât laziness
This one hit home. I used to feel guilty whenever I wasnât doing something â like I had to always be moving, fixing, improving. But sometimes just sitting there, quietly, not trying to control anything⌠thatâs where peace actually lives.
What I started doing
I didnât throw my phone away or run off to meditate in the mountains or anything. But I did start doing some small things differently:
- When I make tea or wash dishes, I just try to do that one thing. No podcast, no scrolling. Just… be there.
- Iâve started watching my thoughts instead of getting pulled into them.
- When I feel anxious or annoyed, I ask: âAm I resisting this moment?â And honestly? Most of the time, yeah, I am. Just seeing that helps.
A few quotes that really stayed with me
âRealize deeply that the present moment is all you ever have.â
âYou are not the pain-body, not the emotionâyou are the awareness behind it.â
âNothing ever happened in the past; it happened in the Now.â
Theyâre not flashy quotes, but they stayed with me. Some of them didnât fully land at first â but they sank in over time. They made me pause.
My honest take
If youâre looking for a book with step-by-step hacks or quick answers, this probably isnât it. And to be fair, some parts felt a little repetitive. But I get why â itâs the kind of book you donât just read once. You sit with it. Let it marinate.
Itâs not about solving your life.
Itâs about seeing your life more clearly â and maybe finding peace in places you never thought to look.
So if your mind has been extra noisy lately, or if youâre tired of always being ten steps ahead of yourself, maybe give The Power of Now a try. You might not âget itâ all at once â I didnât either. But even the parts I did understand made a real difference.