For many years, my professional life followed a familiar rhythm.
There were meetings, conferences, and luncheons — gatherings where people exchanged business cards, discussed projects, and looked for opportunities to collaborate. These events were valuable. They were part of the ecosystem of a working career.
Relationships mattered. Conversations often led to new work. Networking, as the modern term goes, was how things were done.
But occasionally life changes direction in ways that are almost imperceptible at first.
The change doesn’t arrive with a dramatic announcement. It happens quietly.
You attend the same kind of event you’ve attended for decades, and somewhere during the conversation — or perhaps during the drive home — you realize something has shifted.
Your work is no longer the same.
The Observation
When that moment arrives, it can feel strangely disorienting.
For years, we have built habits around our profession. We show up where we are expected. We talk about the projects we are working on. We look for the next opportunity.
But writing — real writing — moves differently.
It grows less through networking and more through attention.
Attention to the small details of experience.
Attention to memory.
Attention to the moments that quietly shape who we become.
The Quiet Pivot
There comes a point when the center of gravity moves.
The work that once required conference rooms and introductions now happens elsewhere entirely.
At a desk.
On a walk.
In the recollection of a moment from childhood that suddenly reveals more meaning than it once seemed to hold.
This shift is not a rejection of what came before. Careers evolve. Interests deepen — the questions we want to explore change as well.
But the work itself becomes more inward.
Less transactional.
More reflective.
Closing Reflection
Perhaps this is what writing really asks of us.
Not constant motion.
But attention.
The world, after all, is full of moments that once seemed ordinary — until we pause long enough to notice what they meant.
And sometimes the most important changes in our lives arrive not as loud declarations, but as quiet realizations that the work we are meant to do has gently found its way to us.














































































