A real coaching story about stillness, authenticity, and the signal you send without words
Presence: that mysterious quality everyone wants and no one can quite define. Think charisma with a yoga mat — less volume, more vibration.
A senior executive wondered why their presence felt inconsistent. Some rooms were easy; others, a strain. The harder they tried to project power, the less natural it felt.
In coaching, we treated presence as an inside job. Not a performance, but a practice. Not louder; clearer.
“Presence is when your stillness radiates more than your words.”
We explored body cues (breath, pace, posture) and mind cues (intent, attention, assumptions). Before big moments, they tried a simple ritual: one minute to arrive — feet grounded, breath even, intent named.
We also examined silence — not awkwardness, but space. The executive learned to let a point land rather than rushing to fill the air.
“Less projection, more alignment.”
Gradually, meetings shifted. People leaned in. The signal-to-noise ratio improved. Presence stopped being a performance and started being a state.
It wasn’t mystical. It was alignment — being the same person on the inside and the outside, on purpose.
Coach’s Reflection
We remember how leaders make us feel. Presence is the feeling of being fully met — by someone who has arrived in themselves first.
Call to Reflection
What 60‑second ritual would help you arrive before you speak in your next important meeting?
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(c) The Yogi Compass – Coaching journeys that help leaders discover their True North.
Yatish Chandrasekhar | PCC (ICF) | CXO Coach | Mentor Coach | Leadership Facilitator
theyogicompass.com | yatish@theyogicompass.com