Quiet Power
On stillness, momentum, and not rushing past yourself
After yesterday’s note about slowing down, a few messages came in.
I know that slow seasons or slowing down is a pain point or struggle for many and that like others who share this kind of content I had hoped the note would gently nudge some inner thinking and reframing how slowing down is viewed. Not in the taboo way I mentioned in the note.
What struck me was how vastly differently it landed for each person.
For some, it felt like relief.
For others, discomfort.
For a few, it surfaced questions they hadn’t let themselves ask yet.
Same words.
Different moments.
Audio has always mattered so much in my work and life. As someone who learns differently, dyslexic, neurodivergent and now Parkinson’s it’s how I learn best and feel I can show up and serve best.
Not because it explains more, but because it gives people space to notice what stays with them.
I’ve been building an audio library around the MTBF pillars for a while now, pieces people can return to as seasons change, not content to “complete.” And lately, I’ve been feeling pulled to make those offerings smaller, more focused, and more moment-specific.
Not courses.
Not programs.
Just guides.
So when that note landed with some that took the time to share via DM, I didn’t want to just turn the responses into more posts or keep unpacking it publicly. Instead, I created a short audio mini guide called Quiet Momentum: Stillness Is a Power Move a place to sit with that moment a little longer, in your own way.
It’s not about doing anything right away.
It’s about listening long enough to hear what the quiet is pointing toward and letting that be enough for now.
If yesterday’s note stayed with you, this is simply a place to continue that conversation.
Quiet doesn’t mean empty.
Sometimes it’s just unfinished.
As always, cheering you on 💫
Bobbi


For someone who's been dealing with chronic illnesses myself for the last 5 years, I also find audio very soothing. When my body and my eyes are tired, my auditory sense comes to help. That's one of my favorite ways to relax.