Man, was I stuck. I mean, really stuck. Like when you try to turn an old faucet and the whole thing just squeaks and won’t move. That was my life a few months ago. Everything felt heavy. Every decision I tried to make just flopped over like a dead fish. I was running in circles, just doing the same dumb stuff every day, pretending it was progress, but really I was just drowning in the old mess.
I was in this holding pattern, right? Complaining about the same handful of garbage issues for weeks, maybe months. I felt like I was pedaling uphill and going backward at the same time. I knew I needed a massive reset, but I wasn’t gonna shell out cash for some fancy weekend retreat or listen to a guru telling me to find my ‘inner child.’ That stuff never sticks for real people.
It all came to a painful, immediate stop one Tuesday afternoon, though. My older sister called. She didn’t even start with a hello. She just laid into me. She’d been asking me to help her with some simple paperwork for weeks, and I kept putting it off, coming up with these pathetic excuses about being ‘too busy’ or ‘too stressed.’ She finally snapped. She just said, “You know what? Forget the papers. You can’t even help yourself, let alone anyone else. You talk about changing your life but you just sit there letting the dirt pile up. You’ve built a dam in your head, and you’re just staring at it.”
Damn. That was my moment. That hit me harder than any breakup or job loss ever could. I actually saw it—I was the problem. I was the one building the wall, stopping everything. I hung up the phone and just sat in silence for a solid hour, staring at the dust on my coffee table. The shame was a physical weight.
I drove out of the city later that day. I wasn’t aiming anywhere in particular, just needed to move. I ended up pulling over by the Old Mill Creek, the little slow river by the abandoned plant. Nothing scenic, just brown, muddy water always moving south. It was just moving. And I remembered some stupid thing I saw on a documentary years ago, something ancient about the river meaning: constant motion, everything is temporary, you can’t dip your foot in the same water twice. I thought, screw it, I’m borrowing this idea. Why not use this goofy, simple river to brute-force a reset?
The Action Plan: Force the Flow
I didn’t buy crystals or start chanting. This was my raw, practical version of using the river’s meaning. This is what I committed to, starting the next day.
- I just showed up. Every single morning for sixteen days straight, I drove to the river and stood there for ten minutes. No phone. Just me and the river noise. I had to physically practice showing up and being present with movement.
- I identified the ‘Clinging Debris.’ I mentally picked three things that were clogging my spirit. Not massive life goals, just the heavy, annoying, repetitive trash. The resentment I had toward my old boss who screwed me over, the constant anxiety about my savings account balance, and the guilt over flaking on my sister. Three anchors that kept dragging me back.
- I mentally tossed them in the current. This sounds totally nuts, but I closed my eyes and pushed those thoughts—the images, the emotions, the arguments—out of my head and into the river’s moving water. I watched them, in my mind’s eye, flowing away, getting smaller and smaller. I made a silent, serious contract with myself: I will not fish those particular three sticks out of the water again. If a thought about the old boss popped back up, I would physically look at the actual river and say out loud, “Gone now. Moving on.”
- I started copying the flow in little ways. The river just accepts whatever flows into it and keeps going. I had to do the same. I forced myself to say yes to small, new, mildly uncomfortable things. An ugly twenty-minute detour on the way to the store. A totally different meal from the one I planned. I even bought a shirt in a color I usually avoid. I had to practice what the river was doing: just keeping the motion going, no matter how insignificant or messy the input was. New input, new movement, every day.
After nearly three weeks, the structure holding me in place just loosened up. I wasn’t suddenly successful or enlightened, let’s be honest. Nobody is that easy. But the dam broke. The water was moving again. I stopped replaying that old argument with my boss mentally because I’d already tossed that trash downstream. I quit checking my savings account every hour, realizing that money anxiety was just one more stupid twig floating by. It wasn’t the whole river. My spirit, the core of me, was flowing again, even if it was just a slow, muddy, unglamorous flow.
It’s not some complicated spiritual retreat. It’s just brutal, repetitive action based on a very simple, everyday idea. If you want a life change, you have to physically and mentally move the emotional crap that’s blocking you. The river is the perfect, dumb, honest reminder of how to do it. You don’t have to be perfect; you just have to keep moving past the mess. That’s the whole ticket. Try it. Go stare at some moving water and start tossing your debris in. It works.
