Sunday, June 14, 2026

 

136

One hundred thirty-six.
The fasting level
of morning sugar.

What would it have been,
I wonder,
if that cookie
hadn't magically floated
from the jar
and landed in my mouth—
savored,
just as I was
on my way to bed?

Saturday, June 13, 2026

 


An Empty Calendar

When the "flow" remains elusive, perhaps the most productive act is to stop striving and embrace the luxury of a day without a plan.

 

Leisure and joy are not the absence of productivity, but the essential inputs for it.

 Arun Kumar

The blank spaces on a calendar are often misread as invitations for labor. We see an uninterrupted stretch of white digital space and instinctively move to colonize it with productivity, as if time not "spent" is somehow time wasted. My morning began with a similar sentiment.

Usually, my Google calendar is a cacophony of appointments—a complex problem in geometric topology where overlapping colors seem to demand a sort of digital teleportation, asking me to be in two places at once. Seeing the usual chaos replaced by an open horizon felt like a luxury. I promised myself a day of deep work, envisioning hours of focused energy channeled into potential LinkedIn or Medium posts.

But within the first hour, the promise began to dissolve. The "groove" I sought remained elusive. Instead of the spark of creativity, a heavy, quiet fatigue descended like a dark blanket. It was the kind of tiredness that does not just affect the body, but the psyche—the weariness that comes from the continuous striving that can end up defining, and eventually consuming, our lives.

In these moments, the "what for" starts to echo.

At this stage of my life, the grip of doing and achieving should be loosening. I should be inhabiting a version of existence where the self finally feels free from striving—where the days are not milestones to be cleared, but spaces simply to be inhabited.

Such moments of fatigue that force us to step back are also the moments when joy finds an opening; it stands up and demands to be heard. Joy’s voice is persistent and persuasive. It asks: Why not take a day off? It suggests wandering through the city, exploring the architecture of the streets, and ending the afternoon at that wood-fired pizza place that has been lingering in the back of my mind. It suggests reading a travelogue and visiting tropical beaches through the eyes of the author, letting the spirit wander where the body cannot be present.

I am reminded of the concept of "proactive rest." It is the realization that leisure and joy are not the absence of productivity, but the essential inputs for it. We cannot channel creativity into writing if the reservoir is dry. A blog post only gains depth when it is fueled by the life lived away from the keyboard.

Perhaps the most productive thing I can do today is to internalize the value of leisurely nothingness. I will move my "workspace" to the porch, not to write, but to simply exist. I will let the stream of consciousness flow through me without the need to capture it, allowing the silence of the calendar to finally match the silence of the mind.

And perhaps, as the night descends, I will feel a quiet contentment with the day’s true rhythm, replacing the sting of resentment with the realization that I achieved exactly what I needed—even if it wasn't what I planned.

Ciao, and thanks for reading.


 

The Weight of Nothingness

We yearn for the moments
still as a pond,
no ripple of need,
no errand calling from the shore.

Yet when they arrive,
the mind becomes a bird
beating inside a cage.

Trapped by nothing to do,
it searches for a stone
to break the surface.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

 

To Be Still

A walk under the tall canopy
light shivering through the leaves,
in quiet, illuminated shafts,
shadows playing over the ground,
the soft crunch of leaves underneath.

In here,
the air is untroubled by ambition,
by striving for what comes next.

Maybe today,
the unease will loosen,
and the mind, no longer
a bundle of quantum jitters,
will learn
to be still.