# The Quiet Pull of Sources

## Where Everything Begins

A source is never loud. It does not announce itself. Instead it sits quietly at the start of things, offering water, light, or truth to whatever needs to grow. The word itself carries a gentle promise: before the river, before the story, before the answer, there is a source. Something small and steady that keeps giving without asking for credit.

On a hot afternoon I once followed a dry creek bed uphill for almost an hour. The trees grew thicker, the air cooler. Finally I found it, a thin silver thread sliding out from under a mossy rock. That tiny stream would become the river children swam in ten miles downstream. The source did not look important. It looked inevitable.

## The Practice of Returning

We spend most of our lives downstream, caught in the noise and rush of whatever the water has become. Every so often something inside us grows tired. We feel the tug to walk back against the current, to remember what started it all.

Returning to sources is not nostalgia. It is maintenance. We check the clear part of ourselves the way a gardener checks the well. Is it still clean? Is it still flowing? The answers are rarely dramatic. Usually they come as a simple yes or no felt in the chest.

- Sit in silence for ten minutes
- Read the first page of an old favorite book
- Ask someone what they loved when they were small

These small trips upstream keep the rest of life honest.

## Carrying the Source Forward

The most beautiful thing about any source is that it does not hoard what it offers. It gives freely and disappears into what it nourishes. A good life might work the same way: become useful, become clear, then let yourself be turned into something larger than yourself.

*On a warm July evening in 2026, the oldest sources still flow without fanfare.*