# Sources

## Where Everything Begins

The word "sources" carries a quiet weight. It suggests not just the start of a river or the root of an idea, but the steady place from which things flow. In a world that often celebrates endpoints and finished products, sources remind us to look backward with care. They are the hidden springs that make the visible possible.

I have come to see my own life as a collection of small sources. Some are people whose kindness shaped me before I understood what kindness was. Others are places I return to in memory, a certain street corner at dusk, a wooden table where long conversations once happened. These origins do not announce themselves loudly. They sit patiently, offering water when we remember to visit them.

## The River and the Spring

Every river begins as something modest. A trickle between stones, easily stepped over. Yet without that first honest movement, the wide waters miles downstream could never exist. The spring does not concern itself with the ocean. It simply rises.

This feels like a gentle philosophy for living. We do not need to know the full course our actions will take. It is enough to keep the source clear. To speak truthfully. To care without calculation. To do small things with steady attention. The rest follows according to its own nature.

- A good conversation can echo for decades
- One honest sentence may become someone else's courage years later
- Quiet integrity compounds like water gathering strength

## Returning

On quiet days I try to trace my sources. Not to worship the past, but to understand what still nourishes me. Some sources I outgrow. Others deepen with time. The practice itself brings a kind of peace, like checking the well before drawing water for the day.

*In the end we become the sources we return to most often.*