Where the Alchemist Disappear

What activities do you lose yourself in?

You look at social media long enough and you start to think everyone is happy.
Every picture has a smile. Every post sounds like a greeting card. Nobody wants to show the parts that don’t work, the parts that don’t make sense, the parts that fall apart when nobody’s looking. Everything has to look polished. Plastic smiles, hollow sentiment, and a Rolodex full of affirmations. That seems to be the toolbox people carry now.

I don’t remember my tools looking like that.
Mine were a pair of Vise-Grips, a roll of duct tape, and a pocket knife. If something broke, you fixed it. If you couldn’t fix it, you figured out how to make it work anyway. No slogans required.

The world feels full of illusionists now.
Everybody trying to make things look better than they are. I suppose that works for some folks. Some people need the show.

For the rest of us, this is where the work starts.

This is where I disappear into the things that keep my head straight.
Writing. Reading. Music. Cameras. Notebooks. Quiet rooms where nobody expects anything from you.

That’s where I lose myself.

I lose myself in writing first. Not the romantic version people talk about, where inspiration pours out like a movie montage. I mean the slow kind. Sitting at the desk with coffee going cold, fingers hovering over the keyboard, chasing a sentence that refuses to land right. Hours pass without ceremony. No music. No conversation. Just the sound of keys and the occasional muttered curse when a paragraph won’t behave.

I don’t know when writing became my thing.
It just kind of took over one day, like it walked up and white-glove slapped every other creative outlet I had. One minute I was doing a little of everything, the next minute writing was the one that wouldn’t leave me alone. The thing I love most about it is getting lost in the story. When it’s working, I don’t feel like I’m making anything up. It feels more like I’m standing off to the side watching it happen, trying to get it down fast enough before it disappears.

If I do it right, I can pull the reader in the same way.
Like I’m pointing at something and saying, look… you see this? isn’t this cool?
At least that’s the idea. Truth is, I fall flat more than I get it right. Most days the words don’t land the way I want them to, the scene doesn’t feel real, and the whole thing sounds better in my head than it does on the page.

That just means you go back and do it again.
Write your ass off.
Succeed or fail, write your ass off, stop, breathe, then repeat.

Most of the time, it isn’t even about finishing a story.
It’s world building. Creating places that don’t exist, people who never lived, histories nobody remembers but me. I’ll sit there sketching out timelines, backstories, small details that may never make it onto the page but still need to be there so the world feels real. One idea leads to another, and before I know it, half the day is gone and all I have to show for it is a notebook full of names, locations, and questions I don’t have answers to yet. That’s fine. That’s part of it.

Sometimes writing is about giving a voice to people who usually don’t get one.
That happens a lot when you start digging into history. Everyone remembers the heroes. Their names are in the books, their stories get told over and over again. But there were always other people there. The ones who carried the gear, who fixed the mistakes, who kept things moving while someone else got the credit. Those are the stories that interest me. The problem is, if you’re going to write about people like that, the world around them has to feel real. You can’t fake it. If the details are wrong, the whole thing falls apart.

That’s where the reading comes in.

I lose myself in reading too, but not the way I used to. Somewhere along the line, reading stopped being escape and became study. I take books apart now. I notice structure, pacing, the way a line is built, the way tension is held. Sometimes I’m looking for facts. Sometimes I’m looking for how someone made a scene feel true. Sometimes I’m just trying to make sure what I’m writing doesn’t sound like it came from somebody who wasn’t there. I wish I could read the way I did when I was younger, without thinking about how the machine works. But even with the gears exposed, I can still disappear into a good book. It just feels more like walking through the engine room than riding the train.

Music does it too. Put the right album on, and I’m gone. Not distracted — gone. The room fades, the clock stops mattering, and I’m somewhere else entirely. In so many ways, music is the soundtrack of our lives. A song comes on you haven’t heard in years, and it pulls you right back to the first time you heard it. Same place. Same people. Same version of yourself you thought you left behind.

It’s like we become time travelers when we listen to music.
We move back and forward through time without even trying. One minute you’re sitting in the present, the next minute you’re back in some moment you forgot you remembered. Sometimes you’re proud of who you were. Sometimes you’re not. Sometimes you find yourself smiling even though you know you screwed things up back then. For whatever reason, the memory still feels right.

I lose myself in visual work the same way.
Photography, cinematography, digital art — anything that deals with light and shadow will pull me in until I forget what time it is. Looking through a lens changes the way the world feels. You stop seeing objects and start seeing shapes, contrast, texture, the way a face catches light for half a second before the moment is gone. When I’m editing images or working on digital pieces, hours disappear without warning. One adjustment turns into ten. One idea turns into another. It isn’t about perfection. It’s about chasing the feeling that the image is finally saying what I saw in my head.

Cinematography is where I get lost the most, because it lets me use everything at once.
Writing for the screenplay. Thinking in scenes instead of chapters. Storyboarding forces me to use the visual side of my brain, not just the narrative side. That’s where things get tricky. I’m wired for long fiction by default. I like detail, internal thought, the slow burn that takes pages to build. Film doesn’t work that way. In a screenplay, one page is about a minute of screen time. That means you have to cut anything that doesn’t move the story forward.

Sometimes you can write something that feels right on the page but doesn’t exist as an image. If you can’t see it, the camera can’t see it either.
If you can’t imagine it, cut it.

Then you get into the reality of the shoot itself.
You write a scene by the water at golden hour, which sounds great until you remember golden hour only lasts so long. You scout locations, DSLR in hand, figuring out where the light will fall and how long you have before it’s gone.

And before you lock anything in, you make sure there’s a plan to feed the crew.
Nothing falls apart faster than a group of hungry people waiting for the light to be right.

Then there’s the quiet work.
Notebooks open. Pens scattered. Pages filled with half-ideas, sketches, fragments of stories that may never go anywhere. I can sit there for hours moving from one page to another, not finishing anything, just circling the same thoughts until something clicks.

My notebooks are an extension of my mind.
My brain runs about a thousand miles an hour, so I need something to slow things down. Whether I’m writing, reading, or working on something visual, there’s a notebook involved somewhere. I know there are devices that are supposed to replace that, and I have most of them, but none of them feel the same as putting something on paper.

Most of the time I’m not satisfied with the notebooks you can buy, so I make my own.
Disc systems when I want to move pages around. Plastic spirals when I don’t want them bending on me. Covers, inserts, paper the way I want it. I can make as many as I need and never wait on something that won’t feel right when it shows up.

And sometimes, if I’m honest, I lose myself in nothing at all.
Just sitting. Thinking. Staring out the window like an old man who forgot what he stood up for. Those moments used to bother me. Now I know better.

That’s usually when the next idea shows up.

The things I lose myself in aren’t loud.
They don’t look impressive.
Most of them wouldn’t make sense to anyone watching.

But they’re the only places where my mind finally shuts up long enough to hear what it’s been trying to say.