Tag: Writers Life

  • Another Year, Still Becoming

    Another Year, Still Becoming

    There is something strange about a birthday when you are no longer young enough to believe that time is endless, but not yet old enough to stop asking what can still be made from what remains.

    Another year has gone by.

    Usually, those words pass through me with a familiar feeling. A small accounting. A quiet glance backward. A brief pause before returning to the ordinary rhythm of the days. But this year feels different. Not louder. Not grander. Not wrapped in some sudden revelation or clean transformation.

    Just different.

    Quieter.

    Closer to the truth.

    I have been slowly becoming the person I once hoped I might be. Not in the polished way people talk about change when they want it to sound easy. Not in the clean language of motivation, where every wound becomes a lesson, and every loss becomes fuel. Real becoming is messier than that. It does not always arrive with applause. Sometimes it looks like sitting alone with a thought you used to run from. Sometimes it looks like writing one honest sentence and feeling your chest tighten because the page now knows something you were trying not to admit.

    For a long time, I carried things instead of naming them.

    Pain. Sorrow. Anger. Disappointment. The old ache of being misunderstood. The quiet exhaustion of trying to explain yourself to people who had already decided who you were.

    I kept too much inside.

    That is a dangerous kind of storage. The body becomes a basement. The mind becomes a locked room. The heart becomes a pantry full of old things nobody has touched, but everybody can smell. You think you are protecting yourself by not opening the door. But silence does not preserve pain. It ferments it.

    People say writing helps.

    I had heard that for years.

    Write it down. Get it out. Put it on the page.

    It sounded too simple to be true. Too soft. Too neat. The kind of advice people offer when they do not know what else to say. But this year, I learned there is a difference between hearing something and finally understanding it in your bones.

    Writing does help.

    Not because the page fixes everything. It does not. The page is not a miracle worker. It will not reach backward and undo what happened. It will not make childhood kinder, grief lighter, or disappointment less sharp. But the page gives the pain a place to stand outside of you.

    That matters.

    There are things I have written that no one will ever see. Things too private for public life. Things that belong only to me and the silence that held me while I wrote them. And maybe that is the point. Not everything has to be published to be powerful. Not every wound has to become content. Not every confession needs an audience.

    Some writing is not for the world.

    Some writing is how you survive yourself.

    This year, I learned how to write without holding back. Or at least, I began to learn. I started putting down the things I had been carrying in secret. The thoughts that came in the dark. The old sorrows with familiar faces. The questions that do not have clean answers.

    And somehow, in putting them down, I left some of them behind.

    Not all.

    I know better than that now.

    Healing is not a dramatic exit. It is not the door slamming shut behind pain while you walk into the sunlight reborn. Sometimes healing is smaller than that. Sometimes it is realizing that a memory no longer controls the whole room. Sometimes it is noticing you can speak of something that once broke you without breaking again. Sometimes it is simply waking up and discovering that yesterday’s sorrow did not take all of today.

    There are pains I have left behind.

    There are sorrows I no longer feed.

    I can now look at old versions of myself with compassion instead of shame.

    That is no small thing.

    We live in a world that loves measurement. Numbers. Milestones. Income. Followers. Weight lost. Books sold. Goals achieved. Proof, proof, proof. We are told to become better, but usually in ways that can be photographed, posted, monetized, or turned into a lesson for strangers.

    But some of the most important growth is invisible.

    No one claps when you stop hating yourself in one small area.

    No one sends flowers when you choose patience instead of anger.

    No one gives you a certificate for writing the truth in a private notebook and choosing not to drown in it.

    Still, these things count.

    They may be the only things that truly count.

    I still have goals. I still want to write better. I still want my work to reach people. I still want the sentences to carry more truth, more weight, more tenderness. I still want to build something that lasts beyond me, something my descendants might one day hold and say, He was here. He tried to tell the truth. He tried to leave a light on.

    But my goals feel different now.

    Less like a punishment.

    Less like a whip.

    Less like a scoreboard I use against myself.

    My current goal is simple.

    To be better.

    A better writer.

    A better person.

    That sounds plain, almost too plain. But there is depth in plain things. A pot of beans. A clean table. A quiet morning. A sentence that does not lie. The older I get, the more I trust what does not need decoration.

    To be better does not mean to become perfect.

    I am not interested in that kind of performance.

    Perfect people are usually hiding something. Or selling something. Or both.

    To be better means to be more honest than I was. More patient. More disciplined. More willing to listen. More willing to admit when I am wrong. More willing to soften without becoming weak. More willing to stand firm without becoming cruel.

    It means learning that strength is not always volume.

    It means understanding that manhood is not the absence of tenderness.

    It means knowing that pain may have shaped me, but it does not have to govern me.

    And it means accepting that none of this happens overnight.

    There is a kindness in that realization. A mercy. We are not finished products. We are not machines waiting for the correct program. We are living things. We grow unevenly. We bend toward light when we can. We carry damage in our rings like old trees. Some seasons produce fruit. Some seasons only teach the roots to hold.

    This year, I think I learned something about roots.

    I learned that private work matters.

    The unseen work matters.

    The quiet effort made when no one is watching matters.

    The sentence was written and deleted. The memory faced and survived. The apology is considered. The old anger questioned. The small promise kept. The day endured without giving up on yourself.

    These are not small things.

    They are the architecture of becoming.

    So this birthday does not feel like a celebration in the usual sense. I do not need noise. I do not need spectacles. I do not need the day to prove my worth through attention.

    What I want is quieter.

    A good meal.

    A little music.

    A clean room.

    A page.

    A moment to look at the man I was, the man I am, and the man I am still trying to become.

    And maybe that is enough.

    Maybe another year is not just a reminder that time is passing.

    Maybe it is also evidence.

    Evidence that I stayed.

    Evidence that I changed.

    Evidence that some part of me, even in the worst seasons, kept reaching toward the life I had not yet learned how to live.

    I am still becoming.

    Not quickly.

    Not perfectly.

    But honestly.

    And this year, that feels like a gift.

    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

  • The Lessons I Wish Someone Had Taught Me Sooner

    The Lessons I Wish Someone Had Taught Me Sooner

    There’s a certain kind of teaching that doesn’t happen at a chalkboard.

    It happens later in the quiet. When you’re old enough to look back at the boy you were and realize he didn’t need tougher lessons—he needed better language for what he was already carrying. He needed someone to name the weight, not just tell him to lift it. He needed instructions that didn’t feel like shame.

    I write children’s stories, and if you look closely, there’s a lesson tucked inside each one like a warm note in a pocket. People sometimes think that’s cute. Sometimes it is. But it’s also a confession.

    Because the truth is: I’m not only writing for children.

    I’m writing for the younger version of me.

    I’m writing for the boy who kept hearing “you’ll learn the hard way” like it was a rite of passage. Like pain was a badge you earned. Like wasted time was the price of admission. Like you had to bleed to be considered real.

    And maybe that’s the oldest lie we tell boys—that the only education that counts is the kind that bruises.

    I grew up in a world that didn’t always teach feelings the way it taught survival. It taught stamina. It taught silence. It taught the art of looking fine. It taught you how to swallow your own questions whole so nobody would see you chewing.

    And then, later—when you’re old enough to know you’ve been living with a hunger you couldn’t name—you realize what you were missing wasn’t toughness.

    It was guidance.

    The kind that says: Here’s how to be human without hardening into a weapon.

    So I started writing the lessons I wish had been offered to me without the threat attached.

    Not sermons. Not lectures. Just small stories.

    A fox who checks on his friends.

    A quiet day that gives permission to rest.

    A soup that doesn’t look fancy but still warms the room.

    A cloud that doesn’t stay forever but leaves growth behind.

    These aren’t just plots.

    They’re repairs.

    They’re me trying to do something with what I’ve learned, instead of letting it sit inside me as regret.

    Because I’ve learned the hard way. I’ve paid for the information for years. With missteps. With stubborn pride. With the kind of loneliness that doesn’t announce itself—it just rearranges your life until you forget what joy used to sound like.

    There’s a particular kind of waste that hurts the most—not wasted money or missed chances, but wasted time becoming. The years you spend thinking you’re broken, or behind, or unworthy of gentleness. The years you spend trying to earn what should have been given freely: permission to grow.

    That’s why the lessons keep showing up in my stories.

    Not because I believe children are empty and need to be filled, but because children are already full—full of questions, full of fear, full of hope they don’t yet know how to protect. And too often they inherit a world that tells them their softness is a flaw.

    So I write to tell them the opposite.

    I write to tell them that kindness is not weakness. That asking for help is not failure. That being unseen isn’t proof you don’t matter. That the quiet parts of you deserve a home.

    That you can be strong without being cruel.

    That you can become a good man without becoming a hard one.

    And I write to tell the adults reading over their shoulders something too: it’s not too late to offer yourself the lesson you never got. It’s not too late to sit beside the younger version of yourself and say, I see what you went through. You didn’t deserve to go through it alone.

    People sometimes assume empathy is just a personality trait, like eye color. But I think empathy is often the leftover heat from a life that could have gone colder. It’s what happens when you’ve been hurt and decide—quietly, stubbornly—that you don’t want to hand that hurt forward.

    That’s what my stories are.

    My refusal to hand it forward.

    I don’t write because I’m better than anyone. I write because I know what it costs when we don’t have maps. I know what it costs when boys are told that confusion is weakness and tenderness is something to outgrow.

    I know how easy it is to turn “learned the hard way” into an identity instead of a warning.

    I’m trying to offer a different inheritance.

    Not perfection. Not a shortcut around life. Life will still be life—wild, unfair, beautiful, sometimes brutal. But maybe we can spare someone a few needless miles. Maybe we can keep a kid from mistaking pain for a teacher and loneliness for a personality.

    We can help them spend less time surviving and more time becoming.

    That’s the hope under every story I write: that someone—somewhere—will feel seen sooner than I did. That they’ll recognize themselves in a gentle fox or a patient cloud and understand, without being told too bluntly, that they’re allowed to be human.

    And if that happens, even once, then none of this is wasted.

    Not the stories.

    Not the lessons.

    Not even the hard way.

    Maybe that’s what these stories really are — small lanterns placed along the path I once had to walk in the dark.

    If someone younger finds one of them sooner than I did, then the years it took me to learn those lessons won’t have been wasted.

    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

    Links