Asshole or Not – Day 18

Prompt – The first time you realized your parents were human.

When I was twelve years old, I went with my father to his office in the evening, housed in the old hospital on the far side of Plattsburgh Air Force Base. The building had been retrofitted for administrative use, but it had not been emptied of its past. During World War II, wounded soldiers had been flown in from Europe and treated there, and whatever could not be healed had stayed behind. The hallways still held that weight, and the air carried its residue in ways that were difficult to ignore. I already knew some places remembered.

My father asked me to go along with him, so I grabbed my radio controlled car and ran it down the long corridor while he gathered paperwork. The fluorescent lights hummed overhead, steady and indifferent, and the sound of my car rolling along the floor occasionally drowned them out before fading again. By then, I had lived with my way of feeling space for four years. I had learned not to talk about it after Alaska taught me that honesty could make adults uncomfortable and cruel. I stayed quiet, observant, and turned inward, practicing a kind of silence about my gift that felt safer than any explanation of it.

I did not see ghosts. What I felt was closer to a shift in temperature and color, like the cool rush that slips through an open door on a hot day and changes the room without asking. It was the aftermath of pain rather than the pain itself. I could feel sorrow pressed into the walls and sense fear lingering where it had once been experienced. Adults liked to say I had an imagination or that I was overly sensitive, but none of those explanations accounted for how a place could hold what happened there long after the people were gone. At twelve, I already understood that some spaces spoke and that not everyone was taught how to listen.

That night, the building responded. Lights turned on after being switched off, sounds traveled from empty rooms, and doors settled without hands. My father stopped moving, and I watched him listen as his shoulders tightened, as if his body understood before his mind caught up. It was the first time I had ever seen fear arrive without permission.

Until then, he had existed as certainty, military strong and commanding, the final word in every room he entered. Standing in that hallway, surrounded by something neither of us could control, he was no longer shielded by rank or routine. His fear did not make him weak. It made him ordinary and placed him back among other people, subject to the same unease that finds everyone eventually.

I did not feel triumphant or vindicated as I witnessed my father’s fear. I grew quiet as something inside me recalibrated, subtle but permanent. That night, I understood that my father was not immune or protected by authority or belief, and that military strength did not mean exemption from being afraid or human. Watching him stand there, facing something he could not explain and something I had already learned to live with, showed me who he was. In that recognition, I understood myself, and something I had trusted and known about him loosened. Asshole or not, he was human.

January 2026
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Piercing the Silence – Day 17

Prompt – A time that the role you played in your family cracked or stopped fitting.

I never found Salisbury Beach to be subtle. It did not whisper. It announced itself with salt hanging heavy in the air, fried dough grease clinging to clothes, and the low mechanical groan of rides that had already lived several lifetimes past their prime. The boardwalk felt stitched together from weathered planks, cigarette butts, suntan lotion, and memory, each step resting on layers of use and neglect that no one bothered to hide.

The boardwalk was loud in a way that felt earned, and I understood that kind of noise, as I lived close to Massachusetts, rough and entirely unapologetic. Arcade bells rang like slot machines, triggered by quarters warmed in palms that had already lost far too many and still kept feeding the machines anyway. Everything about Salisbury felt temporary and permanent at the same time. Rust showed through peeling paint. The ancient ocean breathed steadily just beyond the chaos, indifferent to the noise, the prizes, and the bravado. And still, the boardwalk pulsed with life, a narrow strip of wood holding together sound, sugar, salt, and the stubborn insistence that summer might last just a little longer.

I watched teenagers strut in loose packs, performing indifference while carefully cataloging everything around them. Eyes slid past one another on purpose, yet nothing escaped notice: tank tops, cutoffs, and hair stiff with salt and AquaNet. Every glance carried calculation, and every laugh landed a little too loud, revealing confused confidence. Everyone was playing a role and trying on identities that only summer allowed. Some aimed for tough, others for untouchable, desired, dangerous, or simply older than they were. The boardwalk served as the stage, the crowd became the mirror, and becoming someone new felt possible as long as the lights stayed on and the night refused to end.

I went to Salisbury Beach in Buckie’s 1982 brown Ford LTD that smelled like vinyl, heat, and his mother’s lipstick stained Virginia Slims butts still sitting in the ashtray. I wanted to get my ear pierced on the boardwalk. I wanted proof that I could change something about myself, even if it was small and permanent at the same time. I knew my father would flip out. I carried that knowledge with me the whole ride, heavy but no longer enough to stop me. I was sixteen and exhausted from being quiet and observant. I was tired of shrinking. Tired of watching life happen from the edges. That hole made by the needle was not about jewelry. It was about choosing to be heard, choosing to be seen, and deciding that silence was no longer the safest version of who I could be.

When I got home, my father did exactly what I expected. He unloaded every fear he carried about himself into me as certainty. I would never find a job. I was unworthy. I was a failure, just like my brother. The words came fast and sharp. But something had shifted. The role I had played my whole life no longer fit the moment. Observation failed me. Silence offered no protection. Keeping the story suddenly felt like complicity.

So I spoke. Not carefully. Not strategically. I told him to go fuck himself.

That was the crack. The moment the observer stopped being useful. The moment the storyteller stepped into the story and risked becoming the problem instead of the witness. I did not become safer that night. I became louder. And once I crossed that line, there was no returning to the quiet child who believed that watching was enough.

January 2026
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What The Middle Teaches: Notes From The Fringe – Day 9

Prompt –  A childhood game that taught you something about power.

P.E. sucked. Full on sucked. It was rarely fun. Inflatable projectiles flying across the gym, ropes that reached for the rafters, laps to check off a box for the that year’s President Physical Fitness Award, and knowing that teams had to be made with no assistance from the teacher. None of it was my cup of tea. But as a card carrying member of Generation X, I was metal-slide strong and did what needed to be done, even when it sucked.

On rainy days, the parachute came out in the gym. It always arrived like a promise. The teacher delivered a speech about cooperation and character while the smell of dust and sweat hung in the air. Sneakers squeaked on the gym floor, and the colors of the parachute glowed, promising community, but the sense of community never really followed. Still, we circled the parachute, fingers hooked around the edge, waiting.

Lift. Lower. Again.

The middle was different. The middle was the prize. One kid received the honor, always with quiet ceremony. The lucky kid would slip beneath and disappear into that cool, secret bubble of air while the rest of us kept the parachute alive.

Lift. Lower. Again.

Life on the fringe had a simple assignment. Pretend the work on the edge and the fun in the middle were the same thing. From the outside, it looked magical. From the edge, it felt like labor. Wrists burning. Shoulders tight. No glory. No cool air where it mattered. Still, hope lingered. Maybe next time the middle would belong to one of us. Maybe someone else would carry the weight.

I remember wanting the middle and fearing the middle at the very same time. Long before I understood language like power or systems, something quiet inside that circle told the truth. The kid in the center lived differently. The fabric rose for them without effort. Joy arrived without cost. Power gathered beneath the tent of color while the rest of us stayed at the fringe and pretended it was equal.

Life kept offering new parachutes after I left the gym…at home, in the classroom, and at work. The language was still teamwork. The reality was often a bright center that glowed while everyone else kept the rhythm steady. If I am honest, I have lived in both places. I have held the edge until my hands felt raw. I have also stood in the middle and felt how easily the circle can disappear from view.

The parachute taught a lesson I wish had waited until I was older. Joy is uneven. Work is invisible to those not doing it. And if you are not paying attention, you can live your whole life on the fringe, convincing yourself that the view is the same for all.

Now I pay attention. Who is chosen? Who is always lifting? When I find myself in the center, with air and space and room to move, I work to remember the circle. I notice the hands along the edge. I try to live as the kind of center that makes more room for everyone to breathe, and the kind of edge where collaboration is real.

January 2026
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In the Margins, Where I Breathe – Day 7

Prompt – A rule you refused to follow.

The cover of my Trapper Keeper glowed like the inside of an arcade, all neon and loud. “Stay Rad” splashed across the front like graffiti that wanted to be dangerous but felt more like a fat kid trying to be cool. Behind it, a glowing triangle pulsed like the screen right before a new video game loads. That brief pause held its breath and made a promise just like my planner. The Trapper Keeper whispered that anything was possible, if only life was structured in just the right way.

The lie it tried to sell me, and an entire generation, was simple. Stay organized and life will fall into place. Keep my schedules straight. Keep my notes tight. Keep my dreams in tidy sections, labeled, hole-punched, and snapped into place, class after class. If I could trap it, I could keep it.

There was a rule hidden inside that message, and I have bucked that rule since the moment I knew it existed. Use the planner and live by the calendar, treating the schedule like scripture, is what the academy says to be true. As a student and later as a teacher, I saw it everywhere, as common as desks and whiteboards. Another system. Another promise. Another planner with color-coded order pretending to tame the chaos. Such bullshit.

So I refused.

I refused the Franklin Planner. I refused the Full Focus planner. I refused the Roterrunner. I refused the PalmPilot because that thing never flew! I opened them. I turned the pages. I studied the boxes and printed times that tried to tell me where my life belonged, and something in me said no. I even carried some of them, like talismans I was expected to believe in. But schedules felt like cages. Those preprinted lines felt like a stranger beside me in the cafeteria, offering advice that did not know my story. I did not want every minute accounted for, nor did I want my thoughts sealed into plastic sleeves like tiny body bags for the dead.

Instead, I wanted space for the unexpected. I wanted room to scribble, cross out, wander, and return. I wanted the wide, blank page where anything might appear. Teachers said that being organized meant being mature. Colleagues said that being planned meant being professional. The rule insisted that if I could not live inside the planner, I would fall behind, lose track, and fail.

Maybe. Maybe not. Or absolutely not and immediately no.

What I knew, even then, was simple. My mind did not grow inside boxes. My imagination did not breathe inside time slots. The most important learning arrived in margins, in scribbles, in the slow wandering back to myself. I carried the Trapper Keeper and with it I carried the illusion of control. But the rule that said the planner must run my life. I refused that one.

And in refusing, I learned something I could not learn any other way. Life does not live on lined paper. Meaning does not arrive neatly labeled. The heart does not follow gridlines, and neither does grief, or wonder, or love, or anything that keeps me waking up and trying again. The planner promised certainty. What I needed was presence.

So I chose the blank space. The risk. The messy page that told the truth. Not tidy. Not perfect. Just alive. That became the real rule for me. Stay curious and be willing to get lost. What matters most cannot be trapped, and it sure as hell cannot be kept.

It can only be lived.

January 2026
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Family Rules Silence – Day 6

Prompt – A rule you did not understand but followed anyway.

As a child, because I said so had a different flavor in my house. It showed up inside the command, Do what you are told, when you are told, and how you are told. I always wondered where the who and the why disappeared to in that little piece of military mantra nonsense. Every time I asked, the answer never arrived in words. It arrived through clenched teeth and lips pulled tight, the way a body looks when the mortician fucks up, followed by insults sharp enough to make my questions feel like crimes. The message was simple. Obey. And at the time, that is what I did.

Growing up under that rule taught lessons no curious child is meant to learn. I learned that questions were dangerous and not appropriate. I learned that curiosity was rude. I learned that authority did not need to make sense because authority owned the room. I began to shrink my voice. I memorized the script. I moved with a fixed response instead of a living person, at least inside the walls of my house.

Later, when I stepped into other systems as an adult, I recognized that same mantra living under different names. I saw it forcing its way into classrooms. I saw it showing up in workplaces built on top-down structures that pretended to be leadership. I saw it sitting quietly inside families that claimed love while everyone hid the truth. Do what you are told. When you are told. How you are told. It sounded efficient. It sounded orderly. It sounded like discipline. But beneath all of that shine, it trained me to doubt me and silence my own gut.

As a kid, I obeyed, even when nothing made sense. Obedience created quiet. It created peace, or at least the illusion of peace. But, like all things, there was a cost. What I believed to be obedience was actually just braided fear and respect until both looked the same. Obedience convinced me that the loudest voice in the room must also be the smartest. Obedience placed me inside someone else’s version of right and wrong.

I followed that rule because I believed it made me good. A good child. A good son. Much later, I began to notice the cracks. The whole thing felt like a performance. It was less about obedience and more about fear. Fear that if even one of us asked too many questions, the fragile idea of family might shatter and reveal what was already broken.

Real families ask questions. Real families sit in the discomfort of truth. Real families refuse to treat because I said so as a final answer. It took years for that realization to settle into my bones. My life’s work has become the practice of asking why, again and again, and creating spaces where others feel safe asking as well. And I am grateful to report that the world does not collapse when why is asked. The opposite happens. Everything begins to breathe.

January 2026
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Secrets the Air Remembers – Day 5

Prompt – The first time you felt left out.

The third grade was my year, but not the banner kind of year. I began to understand that the world is not only what sits in front of my eyes. There are other layers beneath the seen, humming quietly, sending signals that not everyone can receive or understand or even wants to comprehend.

Another move pressed my family into boxes as we traveled from California to Alaska. The world grew colder and wider. The sky stretched in a way that felt endless. Mountains rose like silent witnesses to something that could not be named. This move felt different. It carried secrets. Each of us held our own private weight, and each of us carried it alone.

At eight years old, I could barely understand the ordinary world that everyone else seemed to agree on. Then something was added. Colors slipped out of their lanes. New surroundings arrived with weight and feeling attached. I began to hear with my whole body. I remembered air. I understood that walls could breathe, floors could whisper, and space held echoes of grief and laughter at the same time. I had no language for any of it, and I would not for years. What I had instead was loneliness, and the quiet fear that something in me was wrong.

The other eight-year-olds in my class spoke of Saturday morning cartoons, which kid cheated on the playground, and who ran the fastest at recess. Their worlds felt simple. Contained. Safe. When I shared my experiences, I noticed the slow and careful distance that formed around me. There was no vote. No raised hands. No secret ballot. Only the quiet math children learn too early…subtraction. A new seating chart formed without the teacher. Conversations paused when I walked by. The circle tightened, and I found myself outside of it before I even knew it was happening.

That was the first time I remember being excluded because I was myself. Not because I misbehaved. Not because I broke a rule. In that moment, I learned to step backward, to become smaller, to study the room before the room had the chance to study me.

However, every story finds its own way to balance loss. When some people leave, others arrive, carrying lessons that are needed. Ms. Mullins, my third grade teacher, was one of those people. She carried lessons, and she carried me, for the entire year. She noticed. She always noticed. During recess she invited me to sit beside her and asked me what the day felt like. Not what happened. Not what I saw. But what it felt like. I told her the room felt loud even when no one spoke. I told her the air remembered things. And she listened. She did not laugh. She did not try to make it smaller. She spoke in words an eight-year-old could hold. “Your brain is paying deep attention,” she said. “That is not broken. That is a gift. You will learn how to walk with it. I did.”

January 2026
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Storms Outside, Stories Inside – Day 3

Prompt – A childhood place that made you feel safe.

Axl Rose sang about a warm, safe place where, as a child, he would hide and pray for the thunder and the rain to quietly pass. When I sang those lyrics, I kept circling that place in my mind, like walking past a house at night and wondering who lives there and what stories are inside. Where was it? What did it look like? Did it smell like rain, or like dust, or like a home that has been carrying histories longer than I had ever experienced. Was there room for another heart, or was it meant to be a solitary shelter? I also wondered why thunder and rain carried fear at all. Guns N’ Roses never revealed any detail about the space, but they hinted at a world without violent streets, without addiction, without love that wounds, and without that deep, rattling question of whether I deserve to exist here. They hinted at a place where the mind loosens, the body unclenches, and the soul finally exhales. A place that leans close and whispers that I matter. Everyone needs a space like that, especially in the years when the world grows louder than any child can tolerate.

My safe place was never a single room or secret hiding spot. My refuge arrived as words. School became the doorway, books the shelter, and language the quiet country I could travel without asking permission. Inside sentences, storms that belonged to me lost their teeth. Inside stories, I could breathe. I could sit with characters who carried their own griefs, their own bewilderment, and still somehow moved forward. In those pages, a different kind of safety revealed itself, not the kind that erases the world, but the kind that steadies a body long enough to survive it.

Nine schools before graduation. New towns. New faces. New rules about belonging. Again and again. The desks I occupied became the closest thing to permanence. The classroom did not care about orders, moving trucks, or how many times a heart could be asked to reset. Bulletin boards held more order and consistency than the houses I called home. School libraries felt like cathedrals, quiet and alive, each book humming with an invitation: Sit. Listen. Stay awhile. On air bases that never quite turned into home, the constants were teachers taking attendance, paper waiting for stories, and books wide enough to hold a kid who needed a place to land.

Over time, I learned something that felt almost sacred. Safety is not always locked behind a door. Sometimes it lives inside a paragraph, inside a voice on the page telling the truth without apology. Sometimes it lives in the discipline of showing up, sitting down, and letting language hold what feels too heavy to carry alone.

That was my warm, safe place. Not made of walls. Not built with wood or brick. My shelter came stitched together with words, strong enough to weather the thunder, patient enough to wait for the rain to pass, and honest enough to remind me that I matter, even when the world forgets to say it out loud.

January 2026
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East of Hoth – Day 2

Prompt – The first time you realized the world was bigger than your house.

Alaska is a large state. So large, in fact, that it pumps Alaskan egos up enough that people have created shirts with the outline of Texas carved out of Alaska with some smart-ass one liner bannered across the chest. For folks from Texas, this lands about as good as a well-done ribeye and a warm beer at a Sunday tent revival in west Texas.

Jeremy had lived his entire life on Randolph Air Force Base outside San Antonio. Same streets. Same house. Same bedroom. His father never had orders to move. Not once. Then, suddenly, they were ripped from south-central Texas along the San Antonio River and dropped at Elmendorf Air Force Base, somewhere just east of Hoth.

All this kid talked about was how bad Alaska sucked and how amazing Texas was. It was exhausting because I had no understanding of the words he spoke. I had never lived anywhere long enough to grow brand loyalty, root for the home team, or care two shits about the dump we were calling home that year. But Jeremy loved Texas. Fiercely. It was his. It was his home. And he reminded everyone that his home was better than this frozen hellhole.

Until Jeremy, I had never stood next to someone who had actually belonged to a place. The military does not usually allow that. On paper, the reasons sound noble. Rotations create experience. Rotations build leaders. Rotations prevent complacency. New base. New mission. New commander. Pack the boxes. Sign the forms. Start over.

But that is the polished version.

Underneath, constant movement serves the system more than the families inside it. When people stay rooted too long, they grow networks. They build equity. They find their own worth outside the rank on their shoulders. Roots create options. Options create questions. And questions slow obedience. So the military keeps the ground shifting.

Families never quite become local. The church is temporary. The school is temporary. The friendships are temporary. Even the dog feels temporary because the next base might be overseas and not allow pets. Moving trains the family to quietly to pack fast, detach sooner, and care, but not too deeply.

War needs people who will go where they are told and fight who they are told without needing to reconcile that decision with a neighborhood they have loved for twenty years. Do what your told, when your told, how your told! When you belong to the uniform more than you belong to the street you live on, it becomes simpler to leave. Simpler to fight. Simpler to lose and keep moving. Movement builds loyalty upward, not outward.

That was the world I lived in. So normal I could not see it. Then came Jeremy.

He had blown out candles at the same kitchen table for his third birthday, his fifth birthday, and his ninth birthday. He knew which tree in the yard was his climbing tree. He had a house that remembered him. Standing beside him on top of a mountain of snow pushed into the middle of the cul-de-sac while he mourned Texas like a lost Tauntaun, I felt something crack open. It was at that moment I knew the world was bigger than my house. And some people actually got to keep theirs.

January 2026
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Rot, Silence & Salt – Day 1

Inevitably, after the assignment had been described with as much intention and story as possible, after a small spark of curiosity has finally begun to glow in the room amongst the students, a hand goes up – Liam. Jesus Almighty! The question lands like cold water in the crotch.

How many words. How many pages.

In that moment, the invitation to think, to feel, to wrestle with something real collapses into a set of measurements. Not a conversation. Not discovery. Just requirements. Every. Damn. Time.

Discovery through writing has never been about word counts. It has never been about minimum or maximum lengths. Hell, it is not even about grammar, syntax, or the cleanest turn of a phrase. Writing is the practice of staying. Writing is remaining in the chair while the world keeps spinning, choosing to study whatever the last swirl left behind. No prescribed number of words will ever manufacture meaning in a soul unwilling to face what hurts long enough to understand it.

Writing is salt in the wound. It burns. It draws out what has been hiding. The good. The bad. The unspeakable. It makes the environment less friendly for the slow rot of memory and the quiet infection of trauma. The work is to sift through the mess and keep asking the questions that insist on being asked. What happened? How did it unfold? Where did it mark the body, the heart, the mind? Who stood inside that moment, and how might I be slowly forming because of it.

The work is not pretty. The work is excavation. Writing is digging through memory, through failure, through rage, through grief, and asking questions that do not care about comfort nor wish to answer the question of  who left the scar or cut the bone.

Sometimes the words slam the door on repetition. Sometimes repetition of the same word is the only victory. A thin, trembling layer of a word laid across chaos to create order just long enough to hear a whisper calling from underneath the shit. No healing. No closure. Just enough clarity to understand a moment or a thousand without continuing to lie it is all going to be okay.

Sometimes the words keeps the moment from returning. Sometimes the words reveal that the moment will return again and again. But sometimes this means 200 words on the back of scratch paper, other times it means two years of journaling daily. Pages cannot measure that. Word counts cannot measure that. This is not the filling of space. This is the uncovering of something quieter, something that only surfaces when a I stay long enough for the truth to step forward.

And the part my students never could stomach and took me years to learn. The words and the story will not fix the past, repair the fracture, or reconcile anything that has been lost. The story simply refuses to look away like some fucked up carnival mirror bearing witness to the pain just to know it happened. There is a violence in that kind of honesty. A necessary violence. A ripping away of the polite fabric that keeps everyone smiling while they bleed out of sight. Writing does not draw the curtain, rather it pulls it down and throws it on the floor and forces the scene to stand there naked in the dark. And write enough, and a candle may be lit to see there needs to be more work done!  Because the page keeps its own ledger. The page knows when it is lied to. The page knows when the writer flinched and pulled back and dressed the truth up to make it digestible. The page waits. The page holds the line until the writer returns with something real enough to remove the fig leaves and know this is holy ground.

And so, Liam, I cannot tell you how many words it will require. I can tell you that if you do not write the alternative is rot. The alternative is silence, and silence is where the worst lies grow strong. Writing is the refusal to feed them. That is the assignment. That is the cost. That is the only way any of it matters.

But, let’s start with 500 words. Daily. Prompt in hand. And try to make a connection after every month and theme. Sound good?

January 2026
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