06/05/2026
I had a mini epiphany this week I’m keen to share!
I had an 8am appointment with my doctor. A check-up. Nothing serious.
I arrived at the doctor’s surgery a few minutes early. As I sat down in the waiting room I noticed that the other 4-5 people waiting were all looking at their phones. I reached inside my bag to grab mine.
But then I stopped, realising I was automatically following everyone else’s lead.
“No, no, no” I thought to myself. “I’ve only 5 minutes to wait. Just sit”.
I looked at the art on the walls. I glanced at the posters on the surgery board, reminders to get flu injections, the dangers of smoking… I felt an itch to reach into my bag for my phone, but resisted. My mind began to drift.
Plop! Out of the blue, an answer to a problem I had been grappling with the previous day dropped into my head, literally out of nowhere. I was astounded.
Then my name was called for my appointment.
On my journey home I thought about it.
“Oh my goodness.” Had I picked up my phone and played a game or read the news, telling myself the activity was good for my brain, I would not have solved the problem that had been defeating me so far, so quickly or easily.
I would have sat back down at my desk, picking up from the point I had left it the day before, crunching my brain through the options. “Would I have solved the problem with that intentional focus?’ I wondered. “Certainly not as effortlessly as I did “ I thought.
It made me think or perhaps remember, that our brains need little pockets of space. And it turns out there’s a name for what happened. I was so intrigued with what happened I looked it up. It’s called Default Mode Network (DMN).
DMN is a part of the brain that switches on when the mind is allowed to wander. It’s associated with reflection, integrating memories, imagining the future, and it can connect dots we can’t force together through deliberate effort.
Keep it in mind as you go about your life today.
We don’t always need to push harder to perform better. Sometimes all we need is to pause, look around, and let our minds breathe.