What I learned from a year of walking
Three hundred and sixty-five days, one slow route, and a small notebook. A report from the pavement.
Walking is the cheapest form of research and the most reliable. It rearranges the furniture of the mind.
The quiet shape of an idea
There is a particular kind of pleasure in returning to a piece of writing after it has had time to settle. The sentences look at you differently. Some have grown weightier. Others, weightless, ask to be removed entirely.
Most of what I write begins as a small observation — a single image, an overheard phrase, a question that refuses to leave. I keep these in a plain text file and let them sit for as long as they need.
The best ideas are patient. They do not announce themselves; they accumulate.
Working in the open
Working in public is a deliberate constraint. It changes the kinds of decisions you make and the speed at which you make them. It is not, as is sometimes claimed, simply a marketing tactic.
A shorter feedback loop
The most useful effect is the shorter loop between intention and response. A piece published this morning may be read by a hundred people before lunch, and a thoughtful reply will arrive that reshapes the next draft.
- Write first, edit later — but never publish without editing.
- Trust the reader’s intelligence. Cut anything that explains too much.
- Prefer the concrete to the abstract.
A note on tools
The tools matter less than people imagine, but they matter. A good editor disappears. A bad one inserts itself between you and the thought you were chasing.
// a small helper I keep returning to
const words = (text) => text.trim().split(/\s+/).filter(Boolean).length;
Closing
If there is a single thread running through these notes, it is this: do the work, do it slowly, and let it be plain. Readers will meet you the rest of the way.
Hook this up to your favourite commenting platform — Giscus, Disqus, or your own.
Continue reading

Field notes from a small harbour
A week of walking, reading, and watching the boats come in. What slow places teach about attention.

The quiet craft of writing on the web
Notes on publishing slowly in a fast medium, and why the open web still rewards patience and care.

A conversation with a bookbinder
On hand-stitched signatures, the smell of linen thread, and what a centuries-old craft still has to teach the rest of us.