Pull Up a Chair. The Campfire is Open.
Every trail has a campfire. It's the place where you stop walking for a while, sit down with people who get it, and talk about the things that are actually on your mind. Not the polished version. Not the Instagram version. The real stuff β the questions you're carrying, the ideas that are keeping you up at night, the things you're reading or thinking about or wrestling with that don't fit neatly into a chapter or an exercise. This is that place. ββββββββββββββββββββββββββββββ The Campfire is for anything within the world of this work β personal growth, self-discovery, identity, relationships, purpose, spirituality, creativity, the ways we get lost, and the ways we find our way back. Some things that belong here: π A thought that won't leave you alone β about who you are, who you're becoming, or who you used to be π A book, podcast, article, or quote that cracked something open in you π A question you've been sitting with that doesn't have a clean answer π A connection you're making between your own life and something bigger π£οΈ A conversation you had that shifted something β or one you wish you'd had π Something happening in the world that's making you think differently about your own journey This isn't a debate space. It's a thinking-out-loud space. A wondering space. A "does anyone else feel this way" space. A few things that make The Campfire work: Stay curious. The best campfire conversations happen when people are exploring, not defending. Lead with "I've been wondering..." more than "I believe..." Go personal. The more you connect a topic to your own experience, the more it resonates. We're not here for abstract theory β we're here for what it means in your actual life. Let it breathe. Not every post needs a resolution. Some of the most powerful conversations are the ones where we sit with the question together and let it stay open. Welcome the quiet ones. If someone shares something and it gets few responses, be the person who says, "I'm glad you brought this up." Not everything needs a crowd to matter.