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Tough High Mountain Road - Autumn day on a scenic but rough 4X4 trail, Black Bear Pass, lo

Begin Anywhere, Just Begin

"Write it down," I tell myself. "Write it all down, because memory fades but ink remains."


The blank page waits, patient as always. My pen hovers above it, hesitant. Some stories feel too heavy to carry, too complex to capture in mere words. But I tell myself, Begin anywhere, just begin.


So I write the first word, then another, and another.

 

The words come slowly at first, like water from a rusted tap. Then faster, a trickle becoming a stream. Sometimes I pause, uncertain if I'm getting it right. But there is no "right" in writing, only honesty, my characters’ truths and stories. So I continue, letting the ink trace pathways of joy and sorrow, of adventure and romance.


When my hand cramps, I stop and flex my fingers. Look at what has emerged—not perfect, not complete, but alive with truth. Tomorrow I will write more. The day after, more still.


And in this way, I build a new world, one sentence at a time.


Sometimes I read back what I've written and feel a thrill of recognition—yes, this character would say exactly that. Other times, I wince and cross out entire paragraphs. This, too, is part of the process.


On difficult days, when the words refuse to come, I remind myself that silence is also part of writing. The fallow periods are necessary; beneath them, stories germinate in darkness. I've learned to trust these quiet times, to wait without panic until the words return.


Someone will ask how I know when a story is finished. I never truly know. Some tales resolve themselves neatly, while others remain open-ended, breathing on their own beyond my intentions. The best ones surprise even me, their creator, revealing truths I didn't know I harbored.


What matters most isn't perfection but presence—the act of showing up day after day, of listening to the characters who whisper their secrets in the twilight between waking and dreaming.


Writing, like seasons, has its natural rhythms that cannot be forced. I wonder if my characters feel the seasons changing in their world, too.


Sometimes weeks pass when I cannot write a single word that feels true. During these droughts, I read the works of others, drink deeply from wells not my own.


Often, I will dream of a character, long abandoned. They will stand at the edge of my consciousness, arms crossed, waiting. "I'm not finished. My story continues whether you record it or not."


The greatest lie I once believed was that inspiration must precede creation. Now I understand that the reverse is equally true—sometimes we must create to become inspired. The act of placing words on paper (or however you choose to write), however imperfect, summons more words.


Don't be afraid of the blank page, for it holds endless possibilities. Begin anywhere, just begin.





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