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Glossary›Presencing

Glossary

Presencing

A practice of cultivating full awareness in the present moment, emphasizing embodied attention and the act of "being present" as both mindfulness technique and relational capacity.

What is Presencing?

Presencing refers to the intentional practice of bringing one’s full awareness to the immediate, unfolding moment—both internally (bodily sensations, thoughts, emotions) and externally (environment, other people). Unlike passive observation, presencing emphasizes an active, embodied quality of attention that engages the whole person. The term appears in two primary contexts: as a personal contemplative practice rooted in mindfulness traditions, and as a social technology developed by organizational theorists for collective sensing and future emergence. While these applications differ, both share a commitment to direct experience over conceptual thinking and to cultivating awareness as a skill.

In contemplative settings, presencing describes the quality of attention cultivated through meditation, somatic practices, and relational work. Practitioners report a felt sense of “being here” that differs from both scattered distraction and effortful concentration—a relaxed alertness that allows experience to arise without immediately categorizing or reacting to it.

Origins & Lineage

The term “presencing” gained prominence through two parallel streams in the late 20th century. In Buddhist-influenced Western meditation communities, teachers began using “presencing” as an English verb to describe what Pali terms like sati (mindfulness) and sampajañña (clear comprehension) point toward. This usage emerged organically in the 1980s-1990s among American meditation teachers seeking accessible English language for traditional practices.

Simultaneously, C. Otto Scharmer, a senior lecturer at MIT, developed Theory U and introduced “presencing” as a portmanteau of “presence” and “sensing” in his 2007 book Theory U: Leading from the Future as It Emerges. Scharmer’s framework, developed with colleagues at MIT’s Organizational Learning Center, describes presencing as a state of collective awareness that allows groups to sense and actualize emerging futures. This application draws on phenomenology, systems thinking, and contemplative practice, positioning presencing as a leadership capacity.

These streams occasionally intersect—Scharmer explicitly cites meditation and contemplative traditions—but operate largely in separate domains: therapeutic and spiritual communities versus organizational development and social innovation circles.

How It’s Practiced

In contemplative contexts, presencing typically involves deliberate slowing down and directing attention to immediate sensory experience. Practitioners might sit quietly and notice breath, bodily sensations, sounds, or the quality of awareness itself. Unlike concentration practices that focus on a single object, presencing often emphasizes open monitoring—allowing whatever arises to be noticed without preference.

Somatic practitioners incorporate presencing through body-based awareness: feeling into tension, tracking sensations as they shift, or maintaining awareness during movement. Relational presencing—practiced in dyads or groups—involves bringing full attention to another person, listening without formulating responses, and noticing one’s own reactions as they occur.

In Scharmer’s organizational framework, presencing occurs through structured dialogue processes, sensing journeys (immersive field visits), and practices borrowed from meditation adapted for groups. Teams engage in collective silence, deep listening exercises, and journaling to access intuition and shared insight.

Presencing Today

Seekers encounter presencing in multiple settings. Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) and related therapeutic programs incorporate presencing principles without always using the term. Vipassana and Zen meditation centers teach presencing as core practice. Somatic therapies—including Somatic Experiencing, Hakomi, and Sensorimotor Psychotherapy—use presencing as a foundational skill for working with trauma and nervous system regulation.

Online, presencing appears in guided meditation apps, trauma-informed yoga classes, and relational practice circles. The Presencing Institute, founded by Scharmer, offers online courses and facilitator trainings in Theory U methodology. Retreat centers worldwide offer programs explicitly teaching presencing skills, often integrated with other modalities like eco-psychology, embodied leadership, or sacred activism.

Common Misconceptions

Presencing is not simply “paying attention”—it specifically denotes a quality of attention that is embodied, non-judgmental, and receptive rather than analytical. It is not relaxation or spacing out; practitioners describe presencing as energetically alert.

Presencing is not synonymous with mindfulness, though the practices overlap significantly. Mindfulness derives from specific Buddhist frameworks; presencing is a broader, more secular term that draws from multiple traditions. In Scharmer’s usage, presencing specifically involves connecting to future potential, not merely attending to what is.

Presencing does not require special states, visions, or transcendent experiences. The practice emphasizes ordinary awareness rather than altered consciousness. Claims that presencing guarantees particular outcomes—healing, insight, transformation—exceed what the practice itself promises: it offers a way of attending, not predetermined results.

How to Begin

For personal practice, start with short periods of deliberate noticing: set a timer for five minutes, sit comfortably, and bring attention to breathing and bodily sensations without trying to change them. Notice when attention wanders and gently return. Reggie Ray’s audio programs Touching Enlightenment and Your Breathing Body offer structured somatic presencing practices. Richard Strozzi-Heckler’s The Art of Somatic Coaching provides accessible entry points for embodied presencing.

For Scharmer’s organizational approach, read Theory U or access free resources at presencing.org, including journaling exercises and case studies. Many facilitators offer introductory webinars.

Local sanghas, meditation centers, and somatic therapists often teach presencing skills directly. Look for classes in MBSR, Focusing, Authentic Relating, or body-based trauma work—all incorporate presencing as foundational practice.

Related terms

mindfulnessembodied awarenesssomatic experiencingauthentic relatingvipassanatheory u
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