7-40 Challenge | Planning Week
I have a cold. It’s just a cold — no deeper meaning, no metaphor, no lesson the universe is trying to teach me. I got sick. And I hate it.
I’ve almost lost my voice, which is a special kind of cruel, because my whole system runs on talking. I think out loud. I draft by speaking. Every post I write starts as words I say on a walk. Take my voice and you take my main tool. So here I am, full of things I want to make, and the machine I make them with is down.
I’m not derailed. I want to be clear about that. This isn’t a crisis or a turning point. It’s an inconvenience — a few days of forced slowness right when I don’t want to be slow.
But the frustration underneath it surprised me, because of what it revealed. I’m not frustrated because I’m behind. I’m frustrated because I finally have something worth interrupting.
For most of my life, I sold myself short. I talked big about what I’d do and produced little. I had grand plans and a graveyard of half-starts. If I’d gotten a cold five years ago, it would have been a relief — a permission slip to stop pretending I was going to get to the thing.
This year is different. This year I found out I’m far more capable than I ever believed — I’ve published two books, written every day, built things I’m proud of. I finally found my gear. And now that I’m in it, being pulled out — even for a few days, even for a good reason — makes me want to climb the walls.
That’s the honest thing tonight. The annoyance isn’t weakness or impatience. It’s the sound a person makes when they’ve finally found their stride and something stops them mid-step.
I’ll rest. I’ll get well. I’ll be back in the gym Friday and back at full speed right after. But I’m not going to pretend I’ve made peace with the pause. I haven’t. I just found out what I’m capable of, and I want to go do it.
The cold will pass. The hunger it interrupted is the part worth keeping.
