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.



Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Watering life


 

It Was Never About My Arms

Why some people can be held — but never melt.


I’ve been thinking about something lately — the difference between being held and being able to melt.


For a long time I assumed the difference had something to do with the strength of the arms doing the holding. If someone didn’t melt into you, maybe you simply hadn’t made yourself safe enough. Maybe you hadn’t appeared steady enough. Maybe your presence hadn’t been convincing.


Love has a way of sending the mind down those corridors.


But I’ve come to believe something different.


The melt has less to do with love than it does with safety.


The human nervous system is always listening to the world around it. It reads the tone of voices, the rhythms of a household, the pace of a life. It notices whether silence is peaceful or tense, whether attention feels warm or watchful.


And the body is constantly asking one ancient question:


Am I safe here?


If the answer is uncertain, even slightly, the body stays standing. The shoulders hold a little tension. The spine keeps its quiet vigilance. The breath never quite drops all the way down.


But when the body finally believes the answer is yes, something extraordinary happens.


The muscles release.

The breath deepens.

The weight of the person changes.


They are no longer holding themselves up.


They are resting.


That is the melt.


The melt is when a body finally lays down its armor and rests its full weight in another human being.


It is the oldest language of trust the human body knows.


And when it happens, the world grows quieter.


As quiet as a morning sky.


Sometimes I think about this now and understand something I couldn’t see before.


Sometimes the place that feels safest is the very place that quietly prevents the melt.


Familiarity can feel like safety. Habit can feel like safety. Even tension can feel like safety when the body has learned to live inside it long enough.


No blame in that.


Just a truth about how carefully the body learns to survive.


And sometimes what the body needs is not different love, but a different environment.


A quieter rhythm.

A softer sky.

A place where nothing is demanded and nothing needs defending.


That realization is what finally allowed me to understand the thing I used to wonder about.



It Was Never About My Arms


It took me a long time to understand something.


For a while I wondered

if my arms simply weren’t strong enough

to hold the melt.


If I looked uncertain somehow.

If I didn’t seem like the kind of place

a person could dissolve into.


Love leaves those questions behind.


Because some people learn early

that surrender is dangerous.


The body remembers things

the mind rarely says out loud.


It remembers the moment it learned

to stay standing.


To stay alert.

To stay just slightly braced

even inside tenderness.


And once the body learns that lesson

it can take a lifetime

to unlearn it.


So there is something

I want to say now

that I didn’t know how to say before.


I understand.


I understand why you could never melt.


It was never about

the strength of my arms.


Some doors inside a person

were closed long before

we ever met.


And I carry no anger for that now.


Only a quiet knowing

about how carefully

some hearts have had to live.


Because the melt is a rare thing.


The melt is when a body finally lays down its armor

and rests its full weight in another human being.


It is the oldest language of trust

the human body knows.


And when it happens

the world grows quieter.


As quiet

as a morning sky.


Out here on the ridge

I sometimes think about that

in the early hours

when the land is still

and the light is just beginning.


How long it can take

for a body

to believe it is finally safe.


How rare it is

to find a place

where a person can soften

without fear.


But such places do exist.


And if a heart ever arrived here

ready at last

to lay down its armor,


there would be arms

strong enough

to hold it —


long enough

for the body

to remember


how to melt.



I didn’t understand this for a long time.


I used to think the melt depended on the strength of the arms holding us.


Now I think it depends on whether the body believes it is safe enough to let go.


Sometimes all it takes is a different place.

A quieter rhythm.

A softer sky.


A place where the nervous system can slowly learn a new answer to its oldest question.


Yes.


You are safe here.


And when the body finally believes that,


the melt comes on its own.


May we all find at least one place in this world where our bodies finally remember how to melt.