The Moment That Changed Everything
When you spend 17 years sailing around the world, you learn a lot about wind, waves, storms, navigation…
But the biggest lesson the ocean teaches is presence.
One night crossing the Pacific — 18 days at sea, nothing around us but water and sky — I stood alone on deck while Dee slept below. The stars were bright enough to cast shadows. The waves rolled like dark mountains. The boat creaked softly, carrying us faithfully toward the Marquesas.
And I remember thinking:
This is it.
This moment.
Not the destination.
Not the memory.
Not the plan.
This.
Time slowed.
Awareness sharpened.
Nothing existed except the wind in the sails, the rhythm of the waves, and the overwhelming sense of being fully alive.
That kind of presence — pure, uncluttered, unfiltered — is rare on land.
But it is the key to happiness, resilience, connection, and fulfillment.
Yet most people spend their days anywhere but the present moment.
They live in yesterday’s regrets or tomorrow’s worries.
They replay old stories or project future catastrophes.
They miss what’s right in front of them.
The present is where life happens.
But we are almost never there.
Why the Present Moment Feels So Hard to Reach
When I speak to audiences, I often ask:
“How many of you would say your mind is constantly jumping ahead to the next task?”
Almost every hand goes up.
Modern life trains us to:
- multitask
- plan
- worry
- anticipate
- aim for the next achievement
We wear busyness like a badge of honor.
We confuse productivity with presence.
We live in a world filled with noise — deadlines, notifications, distractions, and demands.
Yet your mind, your health, your relationships, your leadership—all function at their best only when you are fully here.
As the happiness research shows:
Presence is strongly correlated with joy, engagement, lower stress, and deeper human connection.
When you’re not present, you don’t just miss the moment —
you miss your life.
What the Blizzard Taught Me About Being Here Now
During the blizzard that nearly took our lives, Dee and I couldn’t afford to think about the past or future.
Looking backward was useless.
Imagining the future was overwhelming.
The only way to survive was to be absolutely present:
- One step
- One breath
- One moment
- One decision
Presence isn’t passive.
It’s power.
When everything feels out of control, being fully in the moment is the only place you regain your strength.
Why Leaders Need Presence More Than Ever
Teams don’t need leaders who are busy.
They need leaders who are here.
When leaders are fully present:
- Employees feel seen
- Conversations deepen
- Trust increases
- Burnout decreases
- Engagement rises
- Innovation expands
People don’t follow distracted leaders.
They follow leaders who make them feel like the only person in the room.
Presence is the new superpower in leadership.
The Science Behind Presence and Happiness
Harvard researchers discovered something extraordinary:
The human mind wanders almost 47% of the time.
And people are significantly less happy when their mind wanders — no matter what they’re doing.
Read that again.
You are happier washing dishes with presence than sitting on a beach thinking about your inbox.
Happiness isn’t an event.
It’s an attention pattern.
The Ocean’s Lesson: Slow Down to Speed Up
On the ocean, rushing is dangerous.
You can’t force the wind.
You can’t out-hurry a storm.
You can’t skip steps in navigation.
You learn to slow down, tune in, and respond to what is actually happening now.
Presence creates clarity.
Clarity creates better decisions.
Better decisions create better outcomes.
This is true whether you’re captaining a sailboat or leading a team through economic uncertainty.
How to Live in the Moment (Starting Today)
Step 1: Give one person your full attention today
It doesn’t matter who:
your partner, a colleague, a child, a friend.
Look them in the eye.
Put the phone down.
Listen without planning your next sentence.
Presence is the deepest form of respect.
Step 2: Choose one daily activity to experience fully
Your morning coffee.
A walk.
Washing dishes.
Your commute.
Notice the sensations, the sounds, the textures.
Anchor your awareness in what’s real right now.
Tiny moments practiced repeatedly reshape your entire nervous system.
Step 3: When your mind races ahead, gently return
This is not failure.
This is the practice.
Presence is not a destination.
It’s a muscle.
Every time you return to the moment, you strengthen it.
Final Thought: Life Happens in the Now
When people reflect on their happiest memories, they’re always describing moments when they were fully present:
- Sunsets
- Laughter around a table
- A child falling asleep on their chest
- A breakthrough conversation
- A quiet moment on the ocean
Presence makes ordinary moments unforgettable.
The more present you are,
the more alive you feel,
and the richer your life becomes.
Happiness is not something you chase.
It’s something you notice.
Right here.
Right now.