Sit. Stay. Think.
Sit, Stay, Think is a thoughtful exploration of the issues shaping our lives, our communities, and our future. Hosted with a commitment to clarity and impartiality, each episode pauses the noise of modern life long enough to examine what really matters — from the deeply personal to the global and geopolitical.
Whether it’s the pressures facing everyday people, the shifting landscape of world events, or the quiet struggles we rarely talk about, Sit, Stay, Think invites listeners to slow down, stay present, and truly think.
If you’re curious, reflective, and ready to engage with a wide range of topics — this is your place to sit with the world for a while, stay grounded, and think a little deeper.
Sit. Stay. Think.
Questions No One Answers
In this opening episode of Sit, Stay, Think, we begin with a question few seem willing to ask: What happens after decisive action?
Following reports of U.S. actions involving Venezuela’s leadership, this episode steps away from partisan defenses and condemnations to examine something deeper—what Buddhism calls Right Action. Not just what we do, but why we do it, and whether we’ve truly considered the consequences that follow.
Drawing on Buddhist teachings like intention, impermanence, craving, and ignorance, this episode explores the danger of acting without wisdom—especially when powerful nations move quickly, confidently, and without a clear vision of what comes next. From historical examples of failed regime change to the quiet suffering created by instability and power vacuums, the focus is not justification, but accountability.
This episode also turns the lens inward, questioning how a nation struggling with healthcare access, institutional trust, and unresolved internal suffering can claim moral clarity abroad. When urgency replaces reflection, and impulse replaces foresight, suffering doesn’t disappear—it spreads.
The episode closes with a guided reflection, inviting listeners to pause, examine their own reactions, and sit with discomfort rather than rushing to certainty.
This is not an argument.
It’s not a solution.
It’s an invitation to slow down—and to ask whether our actions, personal or political, are truly reducing suffering… or simply creating more of it.