ABOUT SACRED NOTICING
A Contemplative Practice for Daily Life
By Michael Cunningham, OFS
YOUR SPIRITUAL FOOTPRINT
Every interaction leaves a trace. Think about the last difficult conversation you had—what did you leave behind after you walked away? Not the decisions or outcomes, but the quality of presence people experienced. The atmosphere that lingered. Whether others felt more settled or more anxious, more open or more defended.
This is your spiritual footprint—the accumulated presence you leave behind in every encounter. Some people leave peace and possibility in their wake. Others leave disturbance and tension. Most of us leave a mixed trail, largely unconscious of the impact our presence creates.
Neuroscience has a term for this: “social-emotional contagion”—the way our inner states spread to those around us through mirror neurons and emotional resonance. We affect each other simply by how we show up.
Your spiritual footprint is being created whether you’re aware of it or not. Sacred Noticing is a practice for making that footprint conscious and intentional.
WHAT IS SACRED NOTICING?
Between what happens to you and what you do about it lies a space. Sacred Noticing teaches you how to find it, expand it, and use it.
It’s a simple rhythm—Notice, Pause, Respond—that brings contemplative awareness into the ordinary moments as your spiritual footprint is formed. Not a technique for special occasions, but a way of being that meets you in the moments you’re already living: the tense meeting, the triggering email, the conversation with your teenager, the decision under pressure.
What makes Sacred Noticing distinct is its completeness. Many practices stop at awareness. You learn to notice what’s happening, to be present, to observe without judgment—valuable, but incomplete. Others focus on contemplation during set-aside time—also valuable, also incomplete. Sacred Noticing completes the cycle, moving from awareness through wisdom to action. It transforms not just how you see but how you respond, not just your interior life but your actual presence in the world.
The ancient Celtic Christians spoke of “thin places”—moments when the sacred breaks through the ordinary. Sacred Noticing helps you recognize that these thin places aren’t rare mystical experiences but are available in every pause, every breath, every moment you stop long enough to let wisdom catch up with your racing mind.
THE THREE MOVEMENTS
NOTICE: Bring contemplative awareness to what is actually present in this moment—not what you expected or hoped for, but what’s actually here. See beyond automatic assumptions. Approach familiar situations with fresh eyes. Notice both the outer situation and your inner responses without judgment.
PAUSE: Create space between what happens and how you respond. You have two options here: Just pause and wait/relax, in whatever form that takes for you. Or be more structured and use the Three-Breath Method is your primary tool: Breath one interrupts reactive patterns. Breath two grounds you in this actual moment. Breath three opens you to wisdom about what’s truly needed here.
This isn’t just spiritual technique—it works with your neurobiology.[1] Ancient contemplatives knew this worked; modern neuroscience explains why.
RESPOND: Act from integrated awareness rather than unconscious reaction. Your response arises from the wisdom accessed in the pause, serving the whole situation rather than just immediate impulses. Sometimes the wisest response is words. Sometimes action. Sometimes continued presence without doing anything at all.
With practice, these three movements flow together into one continuous awareness. You don’t need years of meditation experience. You need to commit to learning a rhythm that, practiced consistently, may transform your way of being in the world
WHERE IT COMES FROM
Sacred Noticing carries DNA from the contemplative tradition that formed me: the Franciscan practice of seeing the sacred in all creation, the Centering Prayer discipline of creating interior space for presence, the Lectio Divina practice of contemplative reading applied beyond scripture, and the Celtic understanding that thin places are moments of true presence available anywhere.
But Sacred Noticing is not a blend of these practices. It’s something that grew from this soil into its own form—a complete contemplative method for transforming your spiritual footprint in daily life.
I didn’t set out to create a new contemplative practice. Sacred Noticing emerged from years of lived experience—retreat leadership, spiritual direction, and my own navigation of daily decisions within the Franciscan tradition.
Over time, I found myself working with a consistent rhythm: noticing what was emerging (often before it was obvious), pausing long enough for wisdom to surface, then offering the next best response. What began as spiritually led decision-making gradually became an everyday reflex. Eventually I realized this wasn’t just how I was approaching my own life—it was a learnable method that could serve others.
WHY IT’S ACCESSIBLE
You don’t need to be Christian to practice Sacred Noticing. You don’t need to believe in God or embrace theological frameworks. The practice works because it engages fundamental human capacities—the ability to notice, to pause, to respond wisely.
At the same time, I’m not hiding the Christian contemplative roots. Sacred Noticing emerges from Franciscan spirituality and centuries of contemplative wisdom. Understanding these roots enriches the practice, even if you don’t share the faith tradition.
For contemplative Christians, Sacred Noticing offers fresh language for ancient practice and helps carry prayer into every interaction. For secular seekers, it provides a structured contemplative method accessible without religious commitment. For those of other faith traditions, it can complement rather than conflict with your existing spiritual path.
The test isn’t whether you believe what I believe. The test is whether the practice changes your spiritual footprint—whether you leave behind more conscious presence and less unconscious reactivity.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Sacred Noticing is practice-based and alignment-backed, not a clinical protocol. It resonates with what we know about attention training and nervous system regulation, and, it has been refined through years of retreats, spiritual direction, and daily leadership.
The practice increases sensitivity to both beauty and pain. As awareness deepens, you notice more of what’s actually present—which includes suffering you might have missed before. This marks genuine spiritual development, not a problem to fix.
Sacred Noticing doesn’t make life easier. It makes you more present to life as it is—with all its beauty and pain, challenge and grace. It’s not another self-improvement technique to master but a relational disposition that may permeate how you inhabit your days.
Most people find that thirty days of gentle consistency provides enough experience to sense whether this practice serves them. The most faithful measure is lived fruit: a calmer presence, clearer speech, wiser timing—noticed first in small ways, then more often.
BEGIN WHERE YOU ARE
The invitation is simple: Notice. Pause. Respond. Repeat.
Choose one familiar situation—your morning coffee, your commute, a recurring interaction. Practice approaching it with Sacred Noticing. See what you’ve been missing because you thought you already knew what was there. Pause before responding to the next trigger. Ask yourself: what does this moment actually need from me?
The practice will feel mechanical at first. That’s normal. You’re building new neural pathways, developing what becomes spiritual muscle memory. With consistent practice—thirty days minimum, often longer—the three movements begin to flow together.
You don’t need to master contemplative theory before you start. You begin with what you have, where you are. Trust the practice to work in you as you work with the practice.
Remember: thin places are everywhere, waiting for your awakened presence to reveal them
Sacred Noticing is fully detailed in “The Practice of Sacred Noticing: Transforming Your Spiritual Footprint” (2026), which includes structured practices, weekly exercises, contemplative poetry and photography, and guidance for specific situations. The book is due to be published mid April 2026.
The practice is offered as a gift to the contemplative community. Share it freely. When teaching or writing about Sacred Noticing, attribution is appreciated: “Sacred Noticing by Michael Cunningham, OFS”
© 2026 Michael J. Cunningham, OFS
This document may be reproduced for non-commercial educational and spiritual formation purposes with attribution.
[1] The first breath interrupts the amygdala’s reactive response. The second activates your parasympathetic nervous system. The third accesses prefrontal cortex wisdom.