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JOURNAL

Open Notebook On Sand

Reflections on movement, place, and living with intention.

Featured Entry

On movement, clarity, and the body’s role in decision-making.

Walking is often treated as something incidental—what we do once we’ve already decided, planned, or resolved. A way to clear the mind after the work has been done.

But historically, walking served a different function.

It was not preparation for thought.


It was the condition that allowed thought to change.

When the body moves forward, the mind follows differently.
Loops loosen. Certainty softens. Perspective shifts—not because it was forced, but because the environment did.

Some clarity does not arrive at desks or in stillness.


It arrives mid-stride.

→ Read

photorealistic image of a BEAUTIFUL WOMAN WRITING IN HER TRAVEL JOURNAL SURROUNDED BY FALL

Walking as a Decision, Not an Exercise

Past Entries

Image by Yoav Aziz
Cities Reveal What You’re Ready to See

Places do not reveal themselves all at once. They respond to attention, timing, and the state in which you arrive.

-> READ
Image by Darko Trajkovic
The Space Between Chapters Is Not Empty

Transitions rarely announce themselves cleanly. The in-between is not absence—it is recalibration.

-> READ
Image by Ivana Cajina
Being Alone Is a Skill, Not a State

Solitude is not something you fall into. It is something you learn to inhabit.

-> READ
This journal is part of The Solo Ways—
an evolving practice of movement, presence, and self-leadership.
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