May 17, 2026
We have two ears and one mouth, so that we can listen twice as much as we speak.
Zeno spoke these words as a teacher in the Stoa Poikile, the painted porch of Athens, where he gathered students not in a formal school but in the open air of public life. He had arrived in Athens as a shipwrecked merchant, lost his cargo, wandered into a bookshop, and discovered philosophy — a man remade by catastrophe into a seeker. This ratio he describes is not merely practical advice about conversation; it is a cosmological stance, an insistence that the world is speaking constantly and that wonder begins the moment we stop drowning it out with our own noise. To sit with that asymmetry this morning is to ask what you might actually hear if you listened with the full weight of your attention.
Reflection
Zeno believed silence was the beginning of wisdom, not its absence. What is one truth the world has been trying to teach you that you have not yet stopped talking long enough to receive?
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