How a Daily Ritual Became My Foundation
When I started writing every day, it was just a task, something to do, a way to fill the empty hours that unemployment created, and a structure in a life that had lost all structure. I didn't call it a ritual. I didn't assign it meaning beyond the immediate need to produce something, anything that might restore a sense of purpose. Over time, the task became something else. It became the one thing I could count on, the one commitment I kept when everything else felt uncertain, and the foundation I built my days around. A ritual is different from a routine. A routine is mechanical. You do it because it needs to be done. A ritual holds intention. It anchors you. It becomes the thread that connects you to yourself when the world is pulling you in too many directions. Writing every day became my way of checking in, not with an audience, but with my own inner state. It forced me to ask: "What's true today? What's changing? What am I avoiding? What needs attention?...