Friday, May 22, 2026

The Hospital Visit You Don’t Want to Make, But Should

Some places in life don’t feel neutral.

A hospital is one of them.

For many people, it’s just a building where care happens. But for others, it holds memories that don’t sit quietly. The smell, the sounds, the long hallways, they bring things back, whether you invite them or not.

I learned that in my thirties.

My mother was in the hospital for over a year with cancer. I visited her every day. Day after day, I walked those halls, sat by her bed, and watched someone I loved slowly fade. There’s no training for that. No way to make it easy. You show up, because not showing up isn’t an option.

And yet, those visits mattered.

I could see it in her face. In the way her eyes lifted when someone came into the room. In the small moments of conversation, even when energy was low. A visit didn’t change her condition, but it changed her day. It reminded her she wasn’t alone in the fight.

That stays with you.

But here’s the complicated part.

Years later, when a friend or family member ends up in the hospital, something inside me hesitates. Not because I don’t care, quite the opposite. It’s because I remember. And those memories aren’t light ones.

So, the mind starts negotiating.

“I’ll go tomorrow.”

“They probably need their rest.”

“I wouldn’t know what to say anyway.”

And just like that, a visit gets postponed.

Now, let’s be honest, sometimes it’s okay to pause. If emotions are raw, if you truly need a moment to steady yourself, that’s human. Walking into a hospital room while carrying unresolved grief can feel like stepping into a storm.

But here’s what experience has taught me, plain and simple:

The visit is not about me.

It’s about the person in that bed.

When someone is sick, really sick, their world shrinks. The days blur together. The routines are no longer theirs. And in that space, something as simple as a familiar face walking through the door can lift the entire room.

You don’t have to have the perfect words.

You don’t have to fix anything.

You just have to show up.

Sit for a while. Talk a little. Listen more. Even a short visit can bring a kind of relief that medicine can’t provide, the feeling of being remembered, valued, and not alone.

I think back to my mother often in these moments.

Not just to the difficulty of that year, but to the quiet power of presence. I didn’t have answers for her. I couldn’t change what was happening. But I was there.

And it mattered.

So now, when that hesitation creeps in, I try to shift the question.

Not “Do I feel comfortable going?”

But “Will my being there make a difference?”

And the answer is almost always yes.

That doesn’t erase the memories. It doesn’t make hospital visits easy. But it gives them purpose. It turns discomfort into something meaningful.

Because love doesn’t always show up when it’s convenient.

Sometimes it shows up in a chair beside a hospital bed, in a room that feels too familiar, saying without words, “You’re not alone.”

And if you’ve ever been on either side of that bed, you know, that kind of visit is never wasted.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

The Six-Week Haircut That Turned Into a Six-Month Statement

 Every family has its traditions.

Some gather around the dinner table. Others meet for holidays. And then there are those monthly Zoom calls, where stories are shared, jokes are recycled, and, in my family, hair quietly becomes the main event in my mind.

There I am, camera angled just right. Not by accident, of course, this is a deliberate production. The lighting catches the flow, the volume, the unmistakable presence of hair that has clearly not seen a barber in quite some time.

My wife loves it long. My brothers? Well, let’s say their relationship with hair has become more historical than current. So naturally, this becomes a moment. A subtle, unspoken victory lap.

“Still got it,” the camera seems to say.

Now, here’s the twist: this wasn’t entirely planned. It started, as many things do, with a bit of procrastination.

“I should get a haircut,” I  thought… about five months ago.

But life gets busy. There are errands to run, people to see, afternoons that feel better spent doing almost anything else. And besides, the hair wasn’t bothering anyone. In fact, it was becoming something of an asset, part style, part statement, part sibling rivalry.

So, the six-week haircut quietly stretched into six months.

To be fair, this is one of those areas where procrastination can feel harmless, even beneficial. Growing your hair out? That’s a choice. A style. A bit of fun. There’s no urgent consequence, no late fee, no alarm bell going off in the background. Sometimes letting things go a little longer gives you a new look, a new story, even a new sense of identity.

And honestly, there’s something to be said for enjoying it. Life doesn’t need to be perfectly trimmed and scheduled at all times.

But here’s where the gentle truth steps in.

What starts as a style can slowly turn into avoidance.

Because somewhere along the way, the thought shifts from “I’m choosing to grow it” to “I really should deal with this.” The edges lose their shape. The mornings take a bit more effort. What once looked intentional starts looking… negotiable.

And underneath it all, there’s that familiar phrase again: “I’ll get to it.”

The thing is, a good haircut isn’t just about appearance, it’s about reset.

It’s that small act of taking care of yourself, of saying, “Alright, time to tidy things up.” You walk out a little lighter, a little sharper, maybe even a little more put together than you felt walking in. It doesn’t change your life, but it does change your day.

And interestingly, it doesn’t erase the fun you had growing it out. It just gives you a new chapter.

Picture the next Zoom call.

Same group. Same jokes. But this time, the camera angle isn’t doing all the work. The haircut is fresh. Clean. Intentional. The brothers notice, of course, they do. The comments come quickly.

“What happened? You join the military?”

But underneath the teasing, there’s a quiet shift. This isn’t just about having hair, it’s about owning it, taking care of it, deciding when it’s time for a change instead of drifting into one.

So yes, let it grow. Enjoy it. Have your moment in the spotlight.

But don’t let “someday” be the only stylist you trust.

Whether it’s six weeks or six months, the real win isn’t how long you wait; it’s knowing when it’s time to sit in the chair and take control of the story again.

 

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Dental Appointment You’ll Definitely Book… Someday

 I had a system for almost 10 years.

Every time I thought about booking a dental appointment, I rewarded myself by doing something else instead. Clean the garage? Done. Call a friend? Absolutely. Reorganize the junk drawer for the third time this month? Why not? It’s practically a public service.

But call the dentist? That could wait and it did for 10 years.

After all, there were perfectly reasonable explanations. Life gets busy. Appointments take time. And let’s be honest, no one wakes up in the morning thinking, “You know what would make today special? Someone poking around my mouth with sharp instruments.”

So, the thought gets postponed. Not cancelled, just gently moved to “later.” A very crowded place where many good intentions go to sit quietly together.

Now, to be fair, there are moments when procrastinating on a dental appointment makes sense. If you’re juggling more urgent priorities, dealing with a temporary financial pinch, or even just needing a short mental break from appointments and obligations, delaying for a little while isn’t the end of the world. Life isn’t meant to feel like a constant checklist.

But here’s where the story tends to repeat itself.

“Later” stretches. Weeks turn into months. Months turned into years. That small sensitivity you noticed when sipping something cold? Still there. That little voice saying, “You should probably get that checked”? Still talking, though now it’s competing with a slightly louder voice saying, “I really don’t want to deal with this.”

And here’s the uncomfortable truth: dental problems are remarkably patient… until they’re not.

What starts as a minor issue, something simple, manageable, maybe even inexpensive, has a way of growing when ignored. It doesn’t send reminders. It doesn’t negotiate. It just quietly progresses until one day it demands your full, immediate attention, usually at the most inconvenient time possible.

Suddenly, you’re not choosing an appointment that fits your schedule. The problem is choosing for you.

And let’s talk about the anticipation, because that’s often the real villain in this story.

The idea of the appointment, the sounds, the smells, the imagined discomfort, tends to be far worse than the reality. Most visits are routine, professional, and over before you’ve had time to regret sitting in the chair. Dentists today are not the villains of childhood memory; they’re problem-solvers trying to keep small things small.

There’s also something quietly empowering about taking action. I made the call. I picked the time. I stayed in control of the situation, rather than reacting to it later when it’s bigger, louder, and more expensive.

Imagine my situation again, but this time, I pause mid–junk drawer reorganization, pick up the phone, and book the appointment. It takes five minutes. I hang up, slightly surprised at how painless that part was.

The appointment came and went. There were a few things wrong. I was lucky a few things that were minor that got handled quickly. Either way, it was done.

And that persistent little voice? Finally quiet.

So yes, it’s okay to put things off briefly when life demands it. But dental care has a way of rewarding those who show up early, and penalizing those who wait too long.

If you’ve been meaning to book that appointment, don’t aim for perfect timing. Aim for done.

Because the best dental visit is almost always the one you didn’t wait too long to make.

Monday, May 18, 2026

The Quiet Art of Not Paying Bills (Until They Start Talking Back)

 There’s a certain kind of optimism that shows up when a bill arrives.

You place it gently on the counter. Not ignoring it, no, no, you’re acknowledging it. You might even stack it neatly with the others, like you’re building a small paper monument to responsibility. You tell yourself, “I’ll deal with that tomorrow. I want to give it my full attention.”

Tomorrow comes. The bill is still there. Quiet. Patient. Judging you just a little.

A week later, it has multiplied. Bills have a way of inviting their friends when left unattended. Now you’ve got a small gathering on your kitchen table, and none of them brought snacks.

Let’s be fair for a moment. There are reasons people procrastinate on paying bills.

Sometimes it’s about timing, waiting for the next pension deposit or paycheck. Sometimes it’s about mood, who really wants to sit down, and watch money leave their account? And sometimes, it’s deeper than that. Bills can feel like a reminder of limits, of choices, of things we’d rather not think about. So, we delay. Not out of laziness, but out of discomfort.

And yes, occasionally procrastination does make sense. Waiting a day or two to align payments with cash flow? Smart. Taking time to review a bill carefully instead of rushing through it? Even smarter. A little pause can be practical.

But here’s where the story turns.

Bills don’t age like fine wine. They age like bananas.

Leave them too long, and things get messy, late fees sneak in, interest starts whispering (then shouting), and that calm little envelope becomes a source of low-grade stress that follows you around. It sits in the back of your mind while you’re trying to enjoy your morning coffee or watch the game. You haven’t escaped it; you’ve just stretched it out.

And here’s the real kicker: the task itself is rarely as bad as the anticipation of it.

Most bills today can be paid in minutes. A few clicks, a confirmation screen, done. The relief that follows? Immediate. It’s like opening a window in a stuffy room; you didn’t realize how heavy the air felt until it was gone.

There’s also a quiet kind of pride in staying on top of things. Not flashy, not something you brag about at dinner, but steady. Grown-up in the best sense of the word. You become someone who handles things early, not someone who gets chased by them.

Imagine this instead.

You walk into your kitchen. There’s no stack of envelopes staring at you. Your accounts are up to date. You know where you stand. That mental space, once occupied by “I should really deal with that”, is now free for better things. Planning a trip. Calling a friend. Sitting with a good book.

All because you didn’t wait.

So, here’s a simple shift: when a bill comes in, treat it like a guest who doesn’t need to stay overnight. Acknowledge it, deal with it, and send it on its way.

No stacking. No silent agreements with “tomorrow.”

Because tomorrow has a funny habit of inviting more bills to the party.

And you? You’ve got better things to do than host them.