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Ever notice how the most content people you know never seem to be doing anything particularly impressive?
They’re not hustling 24/7, they don’t have elaborate morning routines, and they definitely aren’t posting motivational quotes at 5 AM. Yet somehow, they radiate this quiet satisfaction that makes you wonder what they know that you don’t.
I’ve spent years studying what makes people genuinely peaceful, not just temporarily happy or successful. And here’s what threw me: their advice sounds almost insultingly simple. Like the kind of stuff you’d roll your eyes at if you saw it on a motivational poster.
But then I actually tried it.
Turns out, the gap between knowing something intellectually and actually doing it daily is where all the magic happens. These aren’t revolutionary concepts. They’re practices so basic that we dismiss them, looking for something more complex, more worthy of our sophisticated problems.
Here are nine pieces of advice from people who’ve figured out this whole “inner peace” thing. Fair warning: each one will sound too obvious to matter. Until you try it.
1) They do one thing at a time
Remember multitasking? That superpower we all claimed to have on our resumes circa 2010?
Yeah, peaceful people don’t do that.
When they eat, they eat. When they work, they work. When they’re with someone, they’re actually with them, not mentally composing emails or planning tomorrow’s meeting.
I learned this lesson the hard way in Vietnam. Nothing there goes according to plan, and trying to juggle multiple things while navigating the chaos just multiplied my stress. Once I started focusing on one thing at a time, everything became manageable. Even enjoyable.
The science backs this up too. Our brains literally can’t multitask. We just switch between tasks rapidly, exhausting ourselves in the process.
Try this tomorrow: Pick your most important task and give it your complete attention for just 30 minutes. No phone, no tabs, no “quick checks” of anything. Just you and that one thing.
2) They accept that most days are ordinary
Instagram would have you believe that life should be a highlight reel of achievements, breakthroughs, and transformational moments.
Peaceful people? They know that most days are wonderfully, boringly ordinary.
They make coffee. They work. They have unremarkable conversations. They go to bed. And they’re completely fine with that.
This connects to something I explore in my book “Hidden Secrets of Buddhism: How To Live With Maximum Impact and Minimum Ego”. The Buddhist concept of impermanence teaches us that both the extraordinary and the mundane are temporary. When you truly understand this, you stop chasing peaks and running from valleys.
You just live.
3) They say no without explaining
“No, I can’t make it.”
“No, that doesn’t work for me.”
“No, thank you.”
Notice what’s missing? The elaborate excuse, the white lie, the over-apologizing.
Peaceful people have figured out that “no” is a complete sentence. They don’t feel obligated to justify their boundaries or make others comfortable with their choices.
This was revolutionary for me. I used to craft elaborate explanations for why I couldn’t do something, worried that people would think less of me. Now? A simple “that doesn’t work for me” saves everyone time and preserves my energy for things that matter.
4) They have a quitting time
Work expands to fill the time available. But peaceful people have discovered something radical: they stop anyway.
5 PM, 6 PM, whenever they’ve decided. The work isn’t done? It never is. They close the laptop anyway.
This isn’t about being lazy. It’s about recognizing that there will always be more to do, and killing yourself to clear your inbox today just means more will pile up tomorrow.
They work hard during work hours. Then they stop. No guilt, no “just one more email,” no checking Slack during dinner.
5) They move their bodies without calling it exercise
You won’t find genuinely peaceful people suffering through workouts they hate or forcing themselves through trendy fitness classes that make them miserable.
Instead, they walk. They garden. They dance in their kitchens. They stretch while watching TV. They take the stairs.
Movement is woven into their day, not scheduled as punishment for eating or sitting. There’s no performance, no tracking, no optimization. Just bodies doing what bodies are meant to do: move.
6) They keep their mornings simple
While everyone else is attempting 37-step morning routines involving ice baths, journaling, and bulletproof coffee, peaceful people are doing something radical: keeping it simple.
Coffee. Maybe some stretching. Perhaps a few pages of a book. That’s it.
They’ve learned what I discuss in “Hidden Secrets of Buddhism”: small, consistent practices matter more than grand transformations. Better to meditate for five minutes every day than to attempt an hour-long session once a week and give up.
Their mornings set a tone of ease, not achievement. They’re not trying to win the day before breakfast.
7) They assume people are doing their best
That person who cut you off in traffic? Having a terrible day.
Your coworker who dropped the ball? Overwhelmed.
The friend who hasn’t texted back? Dealing with something.
Peaceful people have mastered the art of generous assumptions. They assume everyone is fighting battles they know nothing about and doing the best they can with what they have.
This isn’t naive. It’s practical. Getting angry at others’ imperfections is exhausting and changes nothing. Assuming the best preserves your peace and sometimes even improves the situation.
8) They eat when hungry, stop when full
No counting macros. No intermittent fasting apps. No good foods or bad foods.
Peaceful people have maintained the relationship with food we all had as children: they eat when hungry, stop when satisfied, and don’t think much about it in between.
They enjoy birthday cake without guilt. They skip meals when not hungry without pride. Food is fuel and pleasure, not a moral battlefield.
9) They go to bed at the same time
While everyone else is trying to hack their sleep with supplements, special glasses, and optimization apps, peaceful people do something remarkably simple: they go to bed at roughly the same time every night.
No scrolling until 2 AM. No “just one more episode.” No revenge bedtime procrastination.
They’ve discovered that protecting their sleep is protecting their peace. Everything is harder when you’re tired. Everything.
Final words
Reading this, you might be thinking, “That’s it? This is what brings peace?”
And that’s exactly the point.
We’ve complicated happiness so much that we’ve forgotten it might actually be simple. Not easy, but simple.
The people who seem most at peace aren’t doing anything you couldn’t start today. They’re just actually doing it, consistently, without making it a big deal.
Pick one thing from this list. The one that made you think, “Yeah, but…” That’s probably the one you need most.
Try it for a week. Not perfectly, not extremely, just consistently.
You might be surprised to find that peace isn’t found in adding more to your life. It’s found in doing the simple things that actually matter, and letting everything else go.















