TLDR: Jack Kornfield frames the solstice not as a celebration but as an invitation to pause—a moment when the sun appears to stand still and we are invited to do the same. This astronomical event offers a tangible anchor for spiritual practice: slowing down, taking conscious breath, and recognizing the cyclical nature of seasons and of life itself. Rather than treat solstices as abstract markers, Kornfield suggests we use them as deliberate checkpoints to stop and reset awareness.
What Does the Solstice Actually Invite?
The word "solstice" comes from Latin: sol (sun) and sistere (to stand still). For a moment—or more accurately, for a few days—the sun reaches its furthest point from the equator and appears to pause before reversing direction. Kornfield uses this astronomical fact as a metaphor and a practical cue: "The solstice invites us to stop, to pause, to take a breath—because the sun stands still for a moment."
This is not poetry about what the solstice means. Kornfield is pointing to what the solstice does—it creates a natural waypoint in the calendar that can interrupt habitual consciousness. In a year structured by work deadlines, seasons of productivity, and the relentless forward momentum of daily life, the solstice offers a built-in permission slip to pause.
How Can a Calendar Event Become a Spiritual Practice?
One core insight in contemplative practice is that awareness needs anchors—touchstones that remind us to return to presence. Most of us live in what the Buddhists call "the realm of forgetting": we get caught in thought loops, planning, resentment, or distraction and lose contact with direct experience. Pausing requires something to trigger it.
The solstice functions as a natural trigger. Unlike an arbitrary date on a calendar, it aligns with an observable shift in the sky. Winter solstice marks the shortest day and longest night in the Northern Hemisphere; summer solstice marks the longest day. These aren't symbolic—they are literal, measurable changes in how light falls on the earth.
By consciously pausing when the solstice arrives, a practitioner creates a ritual that:
- Interrupts automatic routines and invites deliberate choice
- Synchronizes personal practice with natural cycles rather than external metrics (performance, achievement, productivity)
- Trains the nervous system to recognize and respect boundaries—the sun reaches an extreme and then reverses; there is a rhythm and limit to expansion
- Provides a communal reference point; many humans across cultures pause at solstices, creating a shared container for reflection
Why Is Pausing Itself a Practice?
In most spiritual traditions, pausing is foundational. In Buddhist meditation, a pause in thought reveals the gap where awareness can rest. In yoga, the pause between inhale and exhale (called kumbhaka) is where transformation happens. In Christian contemplation, stillness precedes encounter with the sacred.
Pausing is not rest—it is active disengagement. When Kornfield suggests pausing at the solstice, he is inviting a temporary withdrawal from the narrative of forward momentum. This withdrawal can be brief: a single conscious breath, a few minutes of sitting still, a walk in nature to notice light and shadow.
The solstice makes this pause visible. The sun literally changes direction; day length shifts. By aligning pause with this natural event, a practitioner leverages the landscape itself as a teacher. The body and nervous system register the season's shift, even if the conscious mind is distracted. This attunement—returning awareness to what is actually present rather than what is planned or feared—is the core of spiritual practice.
How Does Cyclical Awareness Change Our Relationship to Time?
Modern life privileges linear time: progress forward, accumulate, achieve, grow. This momentum creates a particular kind of stress: the fear of falling behind, of wasted time, of not enough hours in the day to complete all goals. Solstices reintroduce cyclical time—the idea that time moves in circles, seasons return, expansion is always followed by contraction.
At winter solstice, the days begin to lengthen again, but slowly. There is no rush; the sun knows its pace. At summer solstice, the light begins to wane, even at the height of brightness. Both moments teach non-resistance to what is.
When a person pauses at the solstice and consciously acknowledges this cycle, they rehearse a deeper truth about existence: nothing lasts forever, nothing is wasted, and the rhythm of life includes both expansion and rest. This is not pessimism; it is realism. It removes the spiritual bypassing that can occur when we cling only to growth and forward motion.
What is the Breath in "Pause and Take a Breath"?
Kornfield's phrase specifically includes breath: "to stop, to pause, to take a breath." This is not accidental. The breath is the most reliable anchor to present experience. When attention follows the breath—feeling the cool air entering the nostrils, the expansion of the belly, the slight pause at the top of the inhale, the warm air leaving—awareness naturally localizes in the body and the now.
Breath also has a metabolic function: conscious breathing, especially exhales that are longer than inhales, signals the nervous system that safety is present. This allows the body to shift from sympathetic activation (fight, flight, freeze) to parasympathetic tone (rest, digest, recover). A solstice pause with conscious breath is thus not just symbolically meaningful; it physiologically recalibrates the system.
In this way, the solstice becomes a health practice. By pausing and breathing consciously at predictable intervals throughout the year, a person trains their nervous system to recognize these moments and to respond with actual relaxation, not just intellectual acknowledgment.
Where to Go From Here
Using the solstice as a pause point is simple but requires deliberate practice. At the next solstice (winter solstice typically falls around December 21; summer solstice around June 20), set an intention to pause. This might mean:
- Sitting in silence for 5–15 minutes and following the breath
- Stepping outside to notice the actual light and shadow at that time of day
- Journaling on a single question: What is ending? What is beginning?
- Gathering with others to acknowledge the turn of the season
- Reading or rereading passages about seasons, cycles, and impermanence from whatever contemplative tradition resonates
The solstice is already happening; Kornfield's invitation is simply to notice it, to stop, and to let that stopping recalibrate awareness. The sun will stand still whether we acknowledge it or not. The question is whether we will stand still with it.



