Tag: daily writing prompt

  • What’s a moment that made you realize you were stronger than you thought?

    What’s a moment that made you realize you were stronger than you thought?

    Daily writing prompt
    Whatโ€™s a moment that made you realize you were stronger than you thought?

    I do not think strength always announces itself.

    Sometimes it does not come roaring into the room, chest out and hands raised. Sometimes strength is quieter than that. Sometimes it is only a man standing in the wreckage of a moment, looking around, realizing he is still breathing.

    Still here.

    Still capable of taking one more step.

    When I began my self-improvement journey, someone told me to write down the things that proved my toughness. Not the things I wished were true. Not the things I wanted other people to see. The real things. The evidence. The life that the receipts had already given me.

    So I wrote them down.

    And I still read them sometimes.

    Not because I live in the past.

    Because sometimes the present tries to make you forget what you have already survived.

    In high school, I learned to ride a three-wheeler with friends. I was young then, still learning the shape of courage and embarrassment, still trying to figure out what kind of boy I was becoming. At some point, I rolled it off the side into a ditch.

    I could have let that be the story.

    The fall.

    The mistake.

    The proof that I did not belong on it.

    But I was fine.

    And more than that, I learned how to ride.

    That may sound small to someone else. But a lot of life is hidden inside moments like that. You fall into the ditch. You find out you are not broken. You climb out. You learn.

    Later, I joined the military.

    That was not a small thing.

    Basic training has a way of stripping a person down. It removes comfort. It removes softness. It removes the illusion that you can always negotiate your way out of difficulty. You learn what your body can do when your mind is tired. You learn what your mind can do when your body is begging for mercy. You learn that discipline is not a feeling. It is a decision repeated until it becomes part of you.

    I survived basic training.

    Then I graduated from A.I.T.

    There are pieces of me that still stand at attention because of that. Pieces of me that know how to endure discomfort without calling it the end. Pieces of me that understand that tired is not the same as finished.

    Then there was the city.

    A new city.

    No job.

    No friends.

    No place to live.

    There are few silences louder than arriving somewhere with nothing certain beneath your feet. No familiar face waiting. No soft landing. No guarantee that the decision you made was brave instead of foolish.

    But I came anyway.

    And now I have the best job.

    The best friends.

    A great apartment.

    That did not happen by magic. That happened because I stayed. Because I figured things out one problem at a time. Because the life I have now was built by a version of me who had every reason to be afraid and kept moving anyway.

    And then there was my back.

    Surgery has a way of making the body feel like a question mark. It reminds you that flesh is fragile. The spine is not just anatomy. It is architecture. It is permission. It is the quiet structure that lets a person stand, walk, work, and live.

    I was told I might not walk.

    A sentence can change the temperature of a room.

    I might not walk.

    That kind of possibility does something to you. It turns every ordinary movement into a prayer you did not know you were praying. It makes you aware of your legs, your feet, your balance, and your body’s willingness to answer when called.

    And now I am on my exercise bike.

    Not because everything was easy.

    Because it was not.

    Not because fear disappeared.

    Because it did not.

    But because strength, real strength, is not always the absence of fear. Sometimes it is pedaling after being told you might not walk. Sometimes it is building a life in a city where you arrived with almost nothing. Sometimes it is finishing training when quitting would have been easier. Sometimes it is climbing out of a ditch and learning how to ride.

    I used to think strength was something you had to prove to the world.

    Now I think it is something you sometimes have to prove to yourself.

    Again and again.

    That is why I keep the list.

    Because on the hard days, when doubt comes dressed in logic, when fear tries to sound like wisdom, when the old voices return and ask who I think I am, I can look back at what I have already conquered.

    I can remember.

    I have fallen.

    I have started over.

    I have endured.

    I have healed.

    I have rebuilt.

    And I am still here.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

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    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    ๐Ÿ‘‰ย Resources for Hard Times

  • What’s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid?

    What’s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid?

    Daily writing prompt
    Whatโ€™s a thing you were completely obsessed with as a kid?

    Books.

    That is the easy answer.

    The truer answer is escape.

    Not escape in the weak sense. Not running away because I could not face the world. More like finding a door where no one else had thought to put one. A door hidden in paper. A door stitched into panels of color and speech bubbles, into capes and impossible cities, into heroes who were wounded but still stood up when the moment demanded it.

    I started with comic books.

    They were bright, loud, impossible things. Men and women dressed like thunder. World’s ending every few pages. Cities held together by courage, guilt, grief, and the stubborn belief that somebody still had to do the right thing, even when doing the right thing cost them something.

    I did not know it then, but I was studying.

    I was learning pacing.

    I was learning myth.

    I was learning how pain could be given shape without being named too plainly.

    Then came fantasy.

    Kingdoms. Forests. Chosen ones. Old magic buried beneath ordinary soil. A sword pulled from silence. A child discovering that the world was larger, stranger, and more dangerous than anyone had warned them. Fantasy taught me that reality was not always the deepest truth. Sometimes a dragon was not just a dragon. Sometimes it was fear. Sometimes it was inheritance. Sometimes it was the thing waiting at the edge of childhood, breathing smoke.

    Then came science fiction.

    Stars. Machines. Strange planets. Futures built from the anxieties of the present. Science fiction taught me that imagination could ask hard questions without raising its voice. What makes us human? What do we owe one another? What happens when progress outruns wisdom? What happens when we build new worlds and carry the same old wounds into them?

    I read anything I could get my hands on.

    Anything.

    There was hunger in it.

    Not the kind that complains. The kind that searches cabinets when no one is looking. The kind that learns to make a meal out of whatever is available. I consumed stories that way. Greedy, grateful, half-starved for elsewhere.

    And sometimes, when the book was right, when the room was quiet enough, when the world had loosened its grip on me for a little while, I stopped reading.

    I was there.

    I could see it.

    The dust on the road. The flicker of torchlight. The broken starship wall humming in the dark. The hero’s hand trembling before the final choice. The old mentor already knowing the cost. The enemy not entirely wrong. The child standing at the edge of becoming, afraid to step forward and more afraid not to.

    That was the magic.

    Not that books showed me other worlds.

    But that they made me feel as if I had survived them.

    Now I do not read as much about the world’s other people as I used to. Not because I love them less. Maybe because some part of me finally understood what all that reading had been preparing me for.

    I was not only visiting.

    I was apprenticing.

    Every comic book, every fantasy kingdom, every distant planet was placing a tool in my hand. Teaching me how to build. Teaching me how to listen. Teaching me that a world is not made only of maps and names and invented histories.

    A world is made of longing.

    A world is made of rules and wounds.

    A world is made of what people fear, what they worship, what they hide, what they carry, and what they are willing to lose.

    These days, I am trying to create my own.

    Not because I have forgotten the ones that raised me.

    Because I remember them.

    Because I owe them.

    Because somewhere there may be another child sitting in a room too hot in summer, too cold in winter, holding a book like it is a secret passage out of the life they have been handed.

    And maybe one day, if I do this right, they will open something I made.

    And for a little while, they will not simply be reading.

    They will be there.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    Please like, comment, and share

    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    ๐Ÿ‘‰ย Resources for Hard Times

  • If I had to describe my ideal life, it would be quiet.

    If I had to describe my ideal life, it would be quiet.

    Daily writing prompt
    If you had to describe your ideal life, what would it look like?

    Not empty.

    Not lonely in the way people sometimes imagine loneliness.

    Just quiet.

    A small life, perhaps. At least from the outside. Not much noise. Not much clutter. Not much reaching for things I never truly wanted. A home with only what I need. A few good meals. A place to write. A place to sit. A window where the light comes in, honestly, without asking anything of me.

    I have learned that some people dream of more.

    More rooms. More noise. More invitations. More proof that they are alive because the world keeps calling their name.

    But I have always been drawn to less.

    Less interruption.

    Less performance.

    Less pretending that constant movement is the same thing as purpose.

    During the COVID lockdown, when the world grew afraid of stillness, I found something in it that felt almost like mercy. I know that may sound strange. I know isolation is not always healthy. I know people suffered. I know silence can become a room with no door if we stay inside it too long.

    But there was something about that quiet.

    The roads softened. The days slowed down. The world stopped demanding that everyone be everywhere at once. For a little while, life lost its appetite for spectacle.

    And in that space, I could think.

    I could hear myself.

    Not the self I perform for others. Not the self shaped by obligation or expectation. The quieter one. The one beneath the noise. The one who had been waiting for the world to hush long enough to speak.

    My ideal life would not be a complete withdrawal from people. I do not believe we are meant to disappear from one another entirely. But I would want a life where connection is chosen, not forced. Where peace is not treated like laziness. Where stillness is not mistaken for failure.

    I would want simple food made with care. Books close by. Music when I need it. Silence when I need that more.

    I would want mornings that do not begin in panic.

    I would want evenings that do not leave me exhausted.

    I would want enough.

    Not abundance as the world defines it.

    Enough space.

    Enough time.

    Enough quiet.

    Enough peace to become myself fully.

    Kyle J. Hayes

    kylehayesblog.com

    If this found you at the right time,

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    Resources for Hard Times

    If you’re looking for practical help, food support, or community resources, you can visit the Salt, Ink & Soul Resources Page.

    ๐Ÿ‘‰ย Resources for Hard Times