# Sources

## Where Everything Begins

The word "sources" carries a quiet kind of honesty. It reminds us that nothing appears from nowhere. Every river has a spring, every idea has a spark, every person has a beginning. In a world that celebrates the finished product, the polished surface, the final draft, it feels almost radical to turn our attention back to the source itself.

I have come to believe that the quality of anything we create or become depends largely on the purity of what we draw from. A clear stream cannot flow from a muddy spring. The same seems true for our thoughts, our work, and our relationships. When we take time to examine our sources, we often discover that some of them no longer serve us. Others, long forgotten, still wait patiently to be remembered.

## The Quiet Discipline

Returning to our sources is rarely dramatic. It looks like sitting quietly with a question instead of rushing to an answer. It looks like asking where a fear truly began, or why a certain kind of beauty moves us so deeply. These small inward journeys rarely make headlines, yet they shape everything that follows.

There is humility in this practice. It asks us to admit that we stand on ground prepared by others, by earlier versions of ourselves, by forces we cannot see. This recognition does not diminish us. On the contrary, it connects us to something larger and more enduring than our individual effort.

- The books that first opened our hearts
- The people whose steady presence taught us trust
- The places that still call us home when we are tired

## A Simple Return

On a warm evening in July, I find myself thinking about how often we complicate what is actually quite straightforward. We chase new answers when what we need is to remember the original sources of our strength, curiosity, and kindness. The spring is still there. It has never stopped flowing. We only need to walk back to it.

*In returning to the source, we often find we were never truly lost.*