# The Quiet Pull of Sources

## Where Everything Begins

A source is never loud. It does not announce itself. Whether it is a spring hidden in tall grass or the first honest sentence in a difficult conversation, a source simply offers what it has. The rest, the river, the story, the life that follows, is not its concern. It only keeps giving.

I have come to believe that most of our trouble comes from forgetting our sources. We chase the wide, impressive river and forget the small, steady trickle that started it. We admire the finished thought and lose sight of the quiet observation that came first. In both nature and in ourselves, the source asks for almost nothing: only that we remember it exists and return when we are empty.

## The Practice of Returning

Every morning I try to sit still long enough to feel where my own attention comes from. Sometimes it comes from fear. Sometimes from love. Sometimes from simple curiosity. Naming the source changes everything. A fear-based decision and a love-based decision may look identical from the outside, yet they lead to very different places downstream.

The older I get, the more I value this small act of tracing back. It is not dramatic. It does not require special tools. It only requires honesty and a few quiet minutes. Most days I fail at it. But the days I succeed feel like coming home to clear water.

- We cannot control what flows from us, only what we draw from.
- The purest sources are often the least celebrated.
- What we return to repeatedly becomes who we are.

## A Small Cup of Water

My grandfather used to walk to the same well every evening, even after pipes were installed in the house. He said the water tasted like his childhood. I think he was really saying that he needed to touch the source once a day to remember who he was.

*In 2026, on a warm July evening, the oldest truth still holds: everything good can be traced back to something simple.*