Sunday, March 15, 2026

The Long Journey to a Glass of Water

After more than a year of effort, the long project of bringing fresh water from the ground to the ridge is finally complete. Along the way I received a thorough education in geology, plumbing, persistence, and above all patience. 


When someone pours a glass of water at Sky View Ridge, it’s easy to assume it has just come from the well a few minutes ago.


In truth, the journey probably began long before the cabins were ever imagined.


Rain falls on the ridge and slips quietly into the ground. Instead of rushing away, much of it sinks into the thin soils of the Driftless hills and begins a slow descent through layers of limestone and sandstone beneath the land. This region was never flattened by the glaciers that shaped much of the Midwest, so the ancient rock beneath the ridge still lies close to the surface, full of fractures and tiny channels that allow water to move downward.


As it travels, the water is filtered naturally through rock and sand. Along the way it dissolves small amounts of minerals ~ calcium and bicarbonate from limestone ~ giving the water the balanced chemistry often found in classic natural spring waters. The same kinds of mineral profiles appear in famous spring regions of the Alps and parts of Belgium, where groundwater slowly gathers character as it moves through stone.


By the time the water settles into the aquifer beneath the ridge, it may have been underground for years, sometimes decades. Hydrogeologists can actually estimate this age using atmospheric isotopes and chemical fingerprints, tiny clocks dissolved in the water that reveal when the rain first fell.


Eventually that water makes its way to the well at Sky View Ridge, rising from about 320 feet below the surface. When it reaches the tap, it carries the quiet signature of its journey: moderate minerals, a slightly alkaline balance, and the clean clarity of water that has spent a long time filtering through the earth.


Coffee drinkers sometimes notice something else. Water with this kind of mineral balance tends to brew a cup that tastes rounder and smoother. Brewers and tea drinkers pay attention to the same thing. The minerals that shape the flavor of famous spring waters also influence the way water interacts with beans, leaves, and grains.


But long before any of that, the water was simply rain falling on the ridge.


Some of the rain, snow and ice that falls tonight may not reach a glass for many years. It will slip downward through soil and stone, joining the slow-moving aquifer beneath the hills.


The aquifer beneath the ridge is different from the vast reservoir-style aquifers that lie beneath much of the plains. In those regions, water often sits in enormous underground basins stored in deep layers of sand and gravel left behind by ancient seas and glaciers. Some of those aquifers contain water that fell as rain thousands of years ago and recharge only very slowly. Because large amounts are pumped for agriculture and cities, many of those reservoirs are gradually declining.


The groundwater beneath this ridge works differently. Here in the Driftless hills, rainwater moves through fractured limestone and sandstone, filtering slowly downward and continually replenishing the aquifer below. It is less like drawing from a buried reservoir and more like tapping into a quiet, ongoing circulation of water moving through the earth.


That natural recharge makes systems like this far more sustainable than the great plains reservoirs that are steadily being drawn down. The water beneath the ridge is part of a living cycle, renewed again and again by the same rain that falls on the land today. 


And one quiet morning in the future, someone will turn on the tap, pour a cup of coffee, and take the first sip without realizing that the water in the kettle began its journey decades earlier ~ somewhere in the clouds above the same ridge where they’re standing.  

The Value of Imperfect Love

In human attempts at love and honesty

imperfection is badly undervalued.


We wait for the right words,

the graceful gesture,

the perfect timing of the heart.


We admire the clean sentence,

the carefully chosen words,

the lover who knows exactly

when to speak

and when to be silent.


But love rarely arrives polished.


It arrives out of breath,

late to the moment,

carrying a handful of words

that were never meant

to be perfect.


It comes awkwardly.

A sentence that stumbles.

A truth that arrives late.

A hand extended

not quite knowing what it will find.


Someone tries to say

I care for you

and instead says something sideways.


Someone reaches

and their hand trembles.


Someone tells the truth

in pieces,

because the whole of it

is too fragile to hold at once.


Someone tries to explain themselves

and only half succeeds.


Someone says the wrong thing

while reaching for the right one.


Someone risks being seen

before they are ready.


And still

there is something sacred in the attempt.


The courage to show up

with a heart that is unfinished.


The willingness to speak

before the sentence is fully formed.


The quiet hope

that another human being

will hear the love

inside the clumsy words.


And if we are paying attention,

something shifts in us then.


We stop grading the performance.


We start listening for the effort.


And we begin recognizing devotion

in its most human form.


Perfection performs.


But imperfection

tries.


And trying

is where love

actually lives.

Finding the Others

I write because sometimes the way I see the world makes me feel a little alone.


Not dramatically alone. Not tragically alone. Just… slightly out of step. As though everyone else received a manual for how to move through the world and I somehow missed the meeting where it was handed out.


There are things I notice that other people don’t seem to talk about. Things I question that others seem perfectly comfortable accepting. There are moments when I feel the beauty of something so deeply it nearly hurts, and other moments when the noise of the world ~ the politics, the rushing, the endless arguments ~ makes me want to quietly step away from it all.


When you feel things like that often enough, you begin to assume you must simply be wired a little differently.


And maybe I am.


But I also know something else now.


When you write honestly about those feelings — without polishing them too much or trying to make them sound impressive ~ something interesting happens. Quietly, almost invisibly, people begin to appear.


Someone writes and says, “I thought I was the only one who felt this way.”


Another says, “You put into words something I’ve never quite been able to say.”


And slowly you realize that the isolation wasn’t quite what it seemed. The people who feel these things are out there. They’re just scattered. Living in their own corners of the world. Thinking their thoughts privately. Assuming they are the odd ones.


Writing is a way of lighting a small lantern.


You put a thought out into the darkness and see who notices the glow.


The funny thing is that I’m not trying to persuade anyone of anything when I write. I’m not trying to win arguments or convince people that my way of seeing the world is the right one. I’m simply describing what it feels like to stand where I stand and look out at things from here.


And if someone reading it feels a small sense of recognition — that quiet inner nod that says yes, I see that too ~ then something good has happened.


A little pocket of isolation dissolves.


Two strangers realize they are not quite strangers after all.


In a noisy world, that may be one of the most valuable things writing can do.


It helps the scattered ones find each other.

Saturday, March 14, 2026

The House With No Locked Rooms

I’ve never been very good at compartmentalizing my life.


Some people seem to have a real gift for it. Their minds are like houses with neat little rooms. One room for work. One for politics. One for family. One for grief. One for love. When something uncomfortable happens, they simply close the door, turn the key, and walk calmly down the hallway to the next room.


Problem contained.


I’ve never been able to live that way.


My walls have always been knocked out. Everything spills into everything else. If something moves me, it shows up in my writing. If something troubles me, it leaks into my conversations. If I’m wrestling with a big idea about the world, it inevitably finds its way into how I think about my friendships, my choices, the way I live my life.


For years I thought this meant something was wrong with me.


We live in a culture that praises compartmentalization as maturity. Be professional. Be appropriate. Keep your feelings out of it. Don’t mix things. Don’t overshare. Don’t bring your personal life into your work life. Don’t bring politics into polite conversation. Don’t bring the world’s suffering into your comfortable little spaces.


Close the door. Move along.


But the longer I live, the more I suspect compartmentalization isn’t wisdom at all. It’s anesthesia.


It allows people to be one person in one room and a completely different person in another without ever having to reconcile the two. It allows someone to be gentle with their children while supporting cruelty in the world. It allows people to think of themselves as kind while participating in systems that harm others. It allows us to avoid the discomfort of letting our values actually follow us everywhere we go.


The mind becomes a house with locked rooms.


And once those rooms are locked, something strange happens. People begin to forget what’s inside them. The things sealed away — doubt, empathy, responsibility, grief — slowly fade from daily awareness. Life becomes easier that way.


But also thinner.


Because the human psyche was never really designed to live in a series of sealed compartments. Everything in us is connected. The way we treat strangers affects how we treat the people closest to us. The stories we tell ourselves about power shape the way we understand love. The beliefs we hold about justice inevitably show up in the smallest corners of our lives.


You can try to divide these things up.


But they will always find each other again.


Refusing to compartmentalize does make life messier. It means your ethics don’t stay politely in one room. They follow you into every conversation, every vote, every friendship. It means you don’t get to pretend certain questions don’t matter. It means your heart stays involved even when detachment might feel more comfortable.


And yes, it probably means you overshare sometimes.


I know I do.


But what people call oversharing is often just honesty refusing to stay quiet. It’s the refusal to pretend that the big questions of life belong somewhere else. It’s the simple recognition that the world we live in and the lives we live inside it are not separate stories.


They are the same story.


Living out here on the ridge has made that even clearer to me. Life out here doesn’t break itself neatly into categories. The weather affects your mood. The land shapes your thinking. A quiet morning changes the way you understand your own mind. Conversations on a porch under the Milky Way drift easily from personal stories to the shape of the world itself.


Out here, everything touches everything else.


The land reminds you that life was never meant to be lived in sealed rooms.


And maybe that’s why I’ve never been good at compartmentalizing. It’s not that I don’t understand the appeal. It would certainly make life easier sometimes.


But easier isn’t always healthier.


To live as one integrated human being — with your values, your feelings, your questions, and your contradictions all occupying the same open space — is messy. It requires courage. It means you can’t always hide from what you know.


But it also means you stay whole.


Your compassion doesn’t switch on and off depending on the room you’re in. Your conscience doesn’t require a locked door. Your humanity doesn’t have to be carefully managed so it won’t inconvenience the rest of your life.


Everything speaks to everything else.


And maybe that’s not a flaw.


Maybe it’s simply what being fully alive actually looks like. 


The longer I live, the more I suspect compartmentalizing isn’t wisdom at all. It’s anesthesia.


If the price of neat little rooms is locking away parts of our humanity,

I’ll take the open floor plan every time.