The Place That Doesn’t Ask Anything of Me

Daily writing prompt
If you could live anywhere in the world, where would it be?

If I could live anywhere in the world, I’d choose a place that doesn’t demand explanations or performances. I’ve lived in cities, deserts, the deep woods — turns out I can settle in just about any landscape as long as it leaves me room to disappear a little.

These days, I picture a small town within driving distance of my hideaway. A place where the market clerk nods without prying, and the librarian teases me about my tattered books but respects the depth of them. Guppy wouldn’t trust her at first, naturally. But a few well-timed treats would work faster than diplomacy ever could. Age catches up with all of us, but if anyone’s going on a diet, it’s her.

Most mornings would start the same: a meditation-heavy book cracked open, a good pen waiting, coffee steaming, my thoughts wandering until Guppy yanks me back to earth with a judgmental meow. Just enough contact with the world to keep me grounded — not enough to get invited to supper. (People get touchy when you say no.)

What I’m really chasing is a chance to breathe. A place where the air isn’t sharpened by worry, where everything isn’t a potential threat even when it isn’t one. Somewhere I can write without the static of the world pressing in, where anonymity isn’t loneliness — it’s relief.

And at the end of each day, I’d know I chose right: Guppy stretching and settling into her next perch, the porch light catching dust in the evening air, the quiet presence of night creatures moving around me. They don’t disturb me. I don’t disturb them. Just a mutual agreement to exist without fear.

Hard to ask for more than that.

Quote of the Day – 09222025


Personal Reflection:
We’re conditioned to see the world through hand-me-down lenses. Parents, teachers, bosses, algorithms — they hand us their truths, and we swallow them without question. It’s easier that way. But easy vision is borrowed vision, and borrowed vision will always keep you half-blind.

Einstein’s words hit harder the longer you sit with them: most people will never risk seeing with their own eyes or feeling with their own hearts. Why? Because it’s safer to blend in, safer to parrot back what the crowd already believes. Safer, but hollow.

To see with your own eyes means you’re going to notice the cracks, the lies, the hypocrisy nobody else wants to name. To feel with your own heart means you’re going to bleed — joy, grief, rage, wonder — all of it, raw and unfiltered. And maybe that’s why so few choose it: it’s not clean, it’s not convenient, and it sure as hell won’t win you applause.

But conformity has its own cost: you end up living as a ghost in your own skin. Better to be cut open by your own truth than embalmed in someone else’s comfort.

Reflective Prompt:
When was the last time you trusted your own eyes and heart over the noise around you? What did it reveal about who you are becoming?

Ego, Snacks, and the Search for Peace

PROSE – REFLECTION – SUNDAY POSER #230


At my core? Still me. Still sarcastic. Still curious. Still low-key allergic to group think and people who say “per my last email.” But life—especially this past year—shifted something in me. A life-altering moment has a way of stripping you down to the truth, whether you’re ready or not.

It made me realize I’ve been sitting on a set of gifts I’ve treated like party tricks. I can do more. I should do more. Sure, I could keep yelling into the void about the uncultured swine running the world (still baffled by how that happened). And if I accidentally handed them the keys somewhere along the way, then yeah—I’ve got some things to atone for. Maybe even finish the time machine in the basement.

But mostly, I’ve just changed in the way that matters: I’ve started trying. Less coasting, more choosing. Less needing to be right, more needing to be honest.

Wisdom? Not exactly my department. I’ll never be that guy. Never been that smart, and I’m okay with that. What I am is honest enough to admit I’m a deeply flawed man. Whatever good I carry, I got from my mother. The rest is a work in progress.

Marcus Aurelius said, “Waste no more time arguing what a good man should be. Be one.” I’m trying. Some days better than others. And like in Sufism, where they speak of the nafs—the lower ego—it’s a constant fight. Not to eliminate your ego, but to tame it. To bring it into balance. Peace doesn’t come from pretending to be pure—it comes from wrestling with your own chaos and not letting it win.

And honestly? If King Solomon—the wisest man to ever live—couldn’t get it all right…

I think I’m good.


One Wish

You have three magic genie wishes, what are you asking for?

DAILY PROMPT RESPONSE

Dealing with a Djinn is like bucking the tiger odds. The odds are in favor of the house. This is because we speak in generalities. we are specific about what we want or need. Sometimes, we actually think we know exactly what we need only to find out it isn’t what we needed at all.

If I remember my scripture, Solomon was the wisest man in the world and there wouldn’t be another as wise as him. If he couldn’t get it right, then I suppose we are good.

I don’t need three wishes. I just need one.

I wish could I get out of my own way

I’ve Heard this over & over

What’s the best piece of advice you’ve ever received?

DAILY PROMPT/CHALLENGES

For the quote of the day, I posted a quote by Albert Einstein. I chose it because of its connection to today daily prompt.

On numerous occasions throughout my life, some variation of the quote itself or its resolution.

“I know you know, but you really understand?”

“It one thing to know what, but another to understand why you’re doing it”

Phrases like those listed above are as common place as the excuses we come with to justify doing something we know we shouldn’t. You don’t have to think about they sort of roll of the tongue.

Yet, I’m sure you have or perhaps, even felt the following.

“I don’t I really that old saying until right now”

“Wow! That’s nanna meant when she used to say that”

“Is that what Mom meant? I used to give such a hard time”

This weekend I was reminded knowing something is one thing; actually doing something is another. I sat there with nothing to say, because the point was made. It realism hit hard. It spoke a truth I don’t believe I was ready for, but I needed to hear.

So, the best advice I’ve gotten? I try to sum it up quickly …

“It’s not enough to know something; you must also understand it.
Then you must figure how you going to apply it. And do wisely.”