The Walk - When Noise Is a Nudge

The roundabout outside my window is a construction zone again. Saws scream, bikes whiz by, even the cemetery mower joins the chorus. I catch myself tensing up—and that’s my tell. When every sound feels invasive, I’m not just annoyed. I’m overwhelmed.

Last weekend didn’t help: hours of travel, a full day at a fantasy event, and then the social hangover. Good conversations, yes—but I’m still paying the energy bill midweek. Old me would have powered through, stacked on more goals, and crashed later. This time I’m choosing differently.

I’m leaning on a few non-negotiables that calm my nervous system and keep creativity alive:

  • A daily walk in the woods (often “working,” but always restorative).

  • An hour of drawing after dinner—rough, imperfect, public. Progress over polish.

  • A simple email triage (star what’s actionable, archive the rest) so my brain can breathe.

Around that, I’m practicing the harder thing: boundaries. I love helping with community projects and church events, but when every month fills with other people’s priorities, my own mission—writing—shrinks. This episode is me saying it out loud and choosing a course correction: a two-week writing retreat instead of more “shoulds.”

If you’ve been there—torn between what’s urgent and what you know you’re called to do—this one’s for you. I talk about reframing regret (“Next time I will…”), resisting the perfection trap, and making decisions ahead of temptation (from snacks to screen time to schedule). It’s not heroic. It’s hygiene. Creative hygiene.

Hit play to hear the full story, plus the moment I finally decide—and why a loud roundabout might be exactly the nudge I needed.