In part two of his three-part series on Eckhart Tolle's *The Power of Now*, George Wright III digs into Chapter 3: "Moving Deeply Into the Now." Building on yesterday's conversation about breaking free from the mind's grip and ending the delusion of time, this episode delivers two practical strategies for actually accessing the present moment and using it to drive better results in your life.
If you've been stuck in a loop of past regrets and future anxieties, this is the conversation you need to hear.
Why Your Mind Keeps Pulling You Away from the Present
The mind is built for time. It gravitates naturally toward memories of the past and projections into the future. Tolle's core argument, and George's main thread throughout this series, is that most of your stress, fear, worry, and negative emotion lives in that time-bound thinking, not in the actual present moment you're standing in right now.
The problem isn't just that your mind wanders. It's that most people don't notice when it happens. You become unconscious, absorbed in the problem or the emotion, and you stop living your life. You start living your reaction instead.
How to Access the Power of the Present Moment
The first strategy Tolle lays out is making a deliberate practice of disconnecting from past and future thinking. George mentions tools he uses personally: the Waking Up app by Sam Harris and the Calm app, along with other options like Headspace. Whether you prefer guided meditation, silent sitting, or something theory-based, the common goal is cultivating mindfulness, a sustained awareness of what's actually happening right now.
When you make this a daily habit, you start catching the moments when your mind drifts. That catching is where the power lives. The moment you notice your mind spiraling into old stories or future anxieties, you've reclaimed your awareness. You're no longer just a passenger.
How to Become the Silent Observer of Your Mind
The second key idea is becoming the watcher of your mind. Tolle calls for a specific kind of observation: silent, non-critical watching. George reads directly from the book:
Intense presence is needed when certain situations trigger you. They're going to trigger a reaction of a strong emotional charge, such as when your self-image is being threatened, a challenge comes into your life that triggers fear, or things go wrong, or an emotional complex problem is brought up from the past.
In those moments, the instinct is to get absorbed in the reaction, to justify, defend, or attack. But Tolle's insight is that this absorption only feeds the problem. As George puts it:
Identification with the mind itself and what it's doing gives it more energy. Observation of the mind withdraws energy from it.
When you observe, you stop identifying. You stop giving the problem more fuel. You step back into presence, and that's when you regain control.
Critically, this observation has to be silent, not critical. A lot of people start noticing their mental patterns and then immediately make themselves wrong for having them. That self-criticism is just another layer of psychological noise. The practice is to notice without judgment, then return to now.
Understanding the Difference Between Psychological Time and Clock Time
One of the most useful distinctions in this episode is Tolle's separation of clock time from psychological time. It's a distinction George says he hadn't fully considered before, and it changes the way you think about goals, schedules, and achievement.
Clock time is functional. You use it to plan, to execute, to learn from experience and move forward. It's necessary and healthy. Psychological time is different: it's the mental weight of past mistakes turned into guilt, or future goals turned into obsession. Tolle describes it this way:
The enlightened person's main focus of attention is always the now. But they are still peripherally aware of time. They continue to use clock time, but they're free of psychological time.
The practical version: if you made a mistake yesterday, learn from it and move on, that's clock time. If you replay it, assign it to your identity, and carry the guilt forward, that's psychological time. If you're working toward a goal and giving your full attention to each step as you take it, that's clock time. If you're obsessively focused on the outcome because you need it to feel complete or validated, you've crossed into psychological time.
You can have a schedule, a plan, and ambitious goals. The key is staying present to each step rather than projecting your sense of self into the result.
Why This Matters for Getting Results
Everything George covers in this series connects back to performance and results. Presence is not just a spiritual practice; it's a practical competitive advantage. When your attention is fractured between past regret and future worry, you're not fully engaged with what you're doing right now. And it's the quality of your attention in the present that determines the quality of your output.
Mindfulness and silent observation aren't about checking out of life. They're about checking in more fully than most people ever do.
Action Steps
- Start a daily mindfulness practice, even five to ten minutes. Apps like the Waking Up app by Sam Harris, Calm, or Headspace are good entry points depending on what style fits you.
- Practice catching your mind. Throughout the day, notice when your thoughts drift to past stories or future worries. The noticing itself is the practice, not eliminating the drift.
- Become the silent observer when something triggers you. Instead of reacting, pause. Watch the reaction rise. You don't have to act from it.
- Distinguish clock time from psychological time in your daily decisions. Use your schedule and goals to take purposeful action, but don't let achievement become the source of your identity or sense of completion.
- Give your full attention to each step of what you're doing right now. That focus, applied consistently, is what creates real results.
Tomorrow George wraps up this series with a look at how negativity and suffering are rooted in time, how you can eliminate negative emotions by staying present, and how to start living your life instead of just your situation. It's never too late to start living the life you were meant to live.

