Tag: Nourishment

  • What Stayed With Me This Month

    What Stayed With Me This Month

    January didn’t arrive with fireworks for me.

    It didn’t kick open the door and demand a reinvention.

    It sat down quietly and waited to see what I would do.

    Every year, January carries a certain pressure—the sense that you’re supposed to emerge from the holidays renewed, corrected, aimed in a better direction. As if surviving December isn’t an accomplishment in itself. As if rest only counts if it’s followed immediately by improvement.

    But this month didn’t ask that of me.

    And because it didn’t ask, I noticed more.

    What stayed with me wasn’t a resolution.

    It wasn’t a plan.

    It wasn’t the sudden clarity people like to perform this time of year.

    What stayed with me were smaller things.

    A kind of tired that didn’t feel like failure.

    The difference between being exhausted and being empty.

    The relief of realizing that not every ache is a problem to solve—some are just signals asking for care.

    What stayed with me was food that did its job without announcing itself.

    Meals that didn’t impress anyone but left me steady.

    Soup that didn’t look fancy.

    Chicken and cabbage in a single pan.

    Breakfast made from what was already there.

    There’s a particular kind of trust that builds when you stop chasing novelty and start paying attention to what actually holds you together. January reminded me that nourishment doesn’t need a spotlight. It needs consistency.

    What stayed with me were the stories meant for children that told the truth anyway.

    Felix learning that rest comes before effort.

    That nourishment matters more than appearance.

    That hard work has meaning when it serves something larger than ego.

    That staying—being present—is sometimes the bravest choice.

    Writing those stories reminded me that lessons don’t stop being true just because we age out of picture books. We just pretend we don’t need them anymore.

    What stayed with me was the question of work—the kind that doesn’t announce itself.

    The work of restraint.

    The work of not becoming what you oppose.

    The work of continuing without applause.

    Honoring Dr. King’s birthday this month brought that into sharper focus. Not the polished version of his legacy, but the disciplined one. The version that understood anger but refused to let it drive. The version that knew the dream was unfinished and chose responsibility anyway.

    That stayed with me.

    And maybe most of all, what stayed with me was permission.

    Permission to arrive slowly.

    Permission to trust what feeds me.

    Permission to stop fixing things that aren’t broken just because the calendar flipped.

    January didn’t make me new.

    It reminded me of what’s already working.

    As the month closes, I’m not carrying forward any goals. I’m carrying forward awareness. Attention. A quieter sense of direction.

    Not everything needs to be upgraded.

    Not everything needs to be optimized.

    Some things just need to be noticed—and kept.

    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.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times

  • Learning to Trust What Feeds You

    Learning to Trust What Feeds You

    The new year barely clears its throat, and already the world is handing you a clipboard.

    New body. New habits. New mindset. New you.

    It’s a familiar ritual—bright, loud, and strangely impatient. As if the calendar turning over means you’re supposed to turn over, too. As if January is a starting gun, and anyone who isn’t sprinting is already behind.

    But a lot of us don’t enter January refreshed.

    We enter it used up.

    The holidays don’t just end—they leave residue. The social obligations, the family history that shows up like an uninvited guest, the spending, the traveling, the remembering. Even the good moments can be exhausting in a way nobody warns you about. By the time the lights come down, you can feel your body asking for something simple: quiet, steadiness, a little less demand.

    And then—here comes the new year, leaning in close, insisting you should want more.

    Maybe you do.

    But before you chase the next big thing, it’s worth asking a gentler question.

    What actually sustains you—when no one is watching?

    Not what looks impressive.

    Not what sells.

    Not what earns applause.

    What keeps you whole?

    Discernment, Not Discipline

    Discipline gets talked about like it’s salvation. Like if you just tighten your grip hard enough, you can force your life into the shape you think it should be.

    But discernment is different.

    Discernment isn’t about forcing. It’s about noticing. It’s about remembering what your body already knows, but your brain keeps ignoring. It’s about telling the truth—not the motivational-poster truth, but the quiet truth that shows up on an ordinary Tuesday when the house is still, and nobody is clapping for you.

    Because here’s what I’ve learned, and it took me longer than it should have:

    A lot of us don’t abandon what works because it stopped working.

    We abandoned it because it stopped being exciting.

    Or because it stopped being new.

    Or because someone on a screen told us there’s a better way—cleaner, faster, more optimized, more expensive.

    We forget the old phrase that has kept more people alive than any wellness trend ever has:

    If it’s not broke, don’t fix it.

    The Temptation of the “Better”

    We live in a culture that treats contentment like a lack of ambition.

    If you find something that steadies you—one routine, one meal, one quiet practice—there’s always a voice hovering nearby saying, Yes, but have you tried this instead?

    It’s a strange form of disrespect, really. Not just to your body, but also to your memory. To the part of you that already did the hard work of learning what helps.

    The best example I can give is food.

    Some meals don’t photograph well. They aren’t built for attention. They’re built for survival and softness. They show up like a hand on your back.

    A pot of beans.

    A bowl of soup.

    Greens cooked low and slow.

    Rice that knows how to hold up for a whole day.

    They don’t announce themselves.

    They just do their job.

    They feed you.

    And there’s wisdom in that. A quiet kind of intelligence. The kind that doesn’t need a new label every January.

    What Feeds You Might Not Impress Anyone

    This is the part people forget: nourishment isn’t always glamorous.

    Sometimes what feeds you is repetitive.

    It might even look “small” from the outside.

    A nightly walk.

    A glass of water before coffee.

    A morning that starts without your phone.

    A playlist you return to like a familiar porch light.

    A person who doesn’t demand a version of you that’s louder than you feel.

    These things don’t earn trophies.

    But they keep you from unraveling.

    And maybe—just maybe—that is the point.

    Because what’s the use of the “better” version of you if it costs you the steadiness you already had?

    Stop Outsourcing the Answer

    Early January is full of experts.

    Everybody is selling a method. A blueprint. A plan. Some of it is useful. Some of it is noise dressed up as concern. But almost all of it carries the same quiet assumption:

    You don’t know what you need.

    So they’ll tell you.

    But your body is older than your calendar.

    It remembers what worked in the hard seasons. It remembers which routines kept you from breaking. It remembers the difference between being “motivated” and being well.

    The question is whether you’ll honor that memory—or override it again because you think you’re supposed to be someone new by now.

    This post isn’t an argument against growth.

    It’s a recalibration.

    A reminder that growth doesn’t have to be loud, and it doesn’t have to start with punishment.

    Sometimes growth begins with respect.

    Respect for what’s already working.

    Respect for the rhythms that steady you.

    Respect for the plain, honest things that keep you fed.

    Stimulation vs. Sustenance

    There’s a difference between what stimulates you and what sustains you.

    Stimulation is quick. Loud. Addictive. It feels like progress because it spikes your attention and gives you the illusion of motion.

    Sustenance is slower.

    It settles. It grounds. It doesn’t demand that you become someone else to deserve it.

    And in a world that rewards constant reinvention, choosing sustenance can feel almost rebellious.

    To keep what works.

    To return to what’s familiar.

    To say, gently but firmly: I’m not abandoning myself this year.

    A Softer New Year Promise

    If you want a new year promise, let it be this:

    Not that you’ll become perfect.

    Not that you’ll grind harder.

    Not that you’ll reinvent yourself on a schedule.

    Let it be that you’ll pay attention.

    That you’ll notice what actually feeds you.

    That you’ll trust what has carried you.

    That you’ll stop treating steadiness like a failure of imagination.

    Because there is nothing wrong with returning to what works.

    There is nothing weak about choosing the thing that makes your shoulders drop, and your breath deepen.

    There is a kind of wisdom in repetition. A holiness in the familiar.

    And if you can learn to trust what feeds you—really trust it—this year won’t need to be dramatic to be different.

    It will be different because you will be listening.

    And for the first time in a long time, you won’t be chasing “better” at the expense of being well.

    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.

    👉 Resources for Hard Times