When I explain the four things I coach around, movement, sleep, food, and time alone with self, the first three land immediately. Everyone already believes in them, even if they don't practice them well. Time alone with self is the one people nod at politely, then quietly file under nice-to-have.
I understand the instinct. For years I filed it there too. I was an athlete. My relationship with my body was built entirely around output, so silence without a task attached to it felt unproductive, almost suspicious.
What changed my mind wasn't a study. It was watching clients, and myself, do everything else right. Good sleep, sensible food, consistent movement, and still feel like strangers inside their own lives. Something was missing that none of the other three pillars could fill.
That something was the time it takes to actually notice how you're doing, rather than just managing how you're doing. There's a difference between a life that runs well and a life you're actually present for. You can have the first without the second for a long time before it catches up with you.
Part of what I've come to see, in myself before anyone else, is that busyness can become a form of avoidance. Staying booked, staying in motion, staying just tired enough at the end of the day that you don't have to sit with a harder feeling or an unresolved conversation. A full calendar can be its own kind of hiding place.
Time alone with self isn't about producing insight on demand. Some sessions of stillness or breathwork go nowhere in particular, and that's fine. It's not a performance metric. It's closer to maintenance, the unglamorous kind, like checking in on a friendship you'd otherwise let go quiet.
I don't think this pillar needs to look dramatic. It might be five minutes before you open your phone in the morning, or sitting with a feeling for a while before naming it and moving on. What makes it a pillar, in my view, is not the form but the fact that it's protected, the way you'd protect a workout or a bedtime.
If you skip it, the other three pillars don't collapse right away. But they start to run on autopilot. You can eat well and still be eating past a feeling. You can move your body and still be moving away from something. Time alone with self is what lets you notice which one is happening.
I'm not suggesting this because I've mastered it. I still catch myself filling silence with tasks more often than I'd like to admit. But building it in deliberately, as its own pillar rather than a byproduct of the others, has changed how honest I can be with myself about how I'm actually doing.