You know, for a while there, I was just kind of floating. Had a lot of ideas, big ones, small ones, but they mostly just stayed in my head. Like I was waiting for a memo, a clear sign, before I actually bothered to do anything. My workspace, my old shed out back, it was a disaster. Tools rusting, boxes piled high, just a monument to good intentions and zero follow-through.
Then, something just… clicked. It wasn’t a thunderbolt, more like a persistent little nudge. It came through in a way that felt really grounded, you know? Like, less about grand plans and more about just picking up the first thing right in front of me and starting. I didn’t know what I was looking for, honestly, but I knew I was tired of just thinking about it.
I started with that shed. Figured if I couldn’t even organize my own space, how was I going to tackle anything else? I went in there, and man, it was worse than I remembered. Dust, spiderwebs, every project I ever half-started just sitting there, mocking me. The first thing I did? I just grabbed a broom. No elaborate plan, no vision board, just a broom. I swear, that’s all I needed to actually get going.
The First Practical Steps
That first sweep led to moving a box. Then another. It was slow, dusty work, but I started to see pockets of space emerge. I realized pretty quickly that I needed a system, something to track what I was doing, not just physically but also mentally. So, I grabbed an old school notebook, the kind with the cheap spiral binding, and a pen. This became my first real “record.”

- Day 1: Just started clearing a corner. Wrote down “Corner 1 done. Found old drill.” Simple as that. It felt good to tick something off, even that small.
- Week 1: I decided I needed to categorize the junk. “Keep,” “Trash,” “Donate.” I actually bought some clear plastic bins, nothing fancy. Started dumping stuff in them. In my notebook, I listed every bin and what went in it. It was brutal. So many forgotten projects.
- Week 2: Tools. Oh man, the tools. Rusty, dull, some missing parts. I realized I needed to learn how to clean and sharpen them. So I did the easiest thing: I pulled up a couple of YouTube videos on basic tool maintenance. I scribbled notes in my notebook, drew terrible diagrams of how to sharpen a chisel. I even took a “before” picture on my phone of a really gnarly saw.
It was all about these small, tangible actions. Each one felt like a tiny victory. I wasn’t just thinking anymore; I was doing. And I was logging it. Not formally, mind you, just chicken scratch, little triumphant notes, sometimes even a frustrated scribble like, “This screwdriver is completely stripped, toss it!”
Making Progress, One Entry at a Time
The shed started taking shape. I wasn’t just cleaning; I was actually learning skills I’d always meant to get around to. I learned how to properly store wood, how to organize screws and bolts, how to test if an old power tool still worked safely. Each new piece of information, each successful task, went into that beat-up notebook. It became a chronicle of my practical awakening.
I found myself actually planning small projects. Nothing big, just like, “Okay, I need a new shelf for these paints.” Instead of just thinking about it, I’d sketch it out in the notebook, list the dimensions, the type of wood I’d need. Then I’d actually go and get the wood. The first time I cut a piece of lumber straight, I almost cheered out loud. It went into the notebook: “First straight cut! 12 inches exactly! High five!”
There were plenty of screw-ups, don’t get me wrong. I drilled through a finger by accident (minor graze, but scared the hell out of me), cut a piece of wood too short, glued two pieces together backwards. Every one of those mistakes got documented, too. Not in a blaming way, but in a learning way. “Don’t rush glue-ups. Measure twice, cut once, and then measure again.”
What it Truly Meant
The “outcome” for me wasn’t some grand revelation about the meaning of life. It was much simpler, much more solid. It was the realization that all those big dreams and vague ideas often just need one small, real, physical step to get them rolling. It taught me that genuine opportunity isn’t always handed to you on a silver platter; sometimes it starts by just cleaning your own damn shed.
My notebook is still with me. It’s thicker now, filled with more plans, more lessons, more crooked drawings, and more proud little checkmarks. It’s a testament to the power of simply starting, of picking up that broom, and getting your hands dirty. It taught me that the biggest difference between just wishing and actually doing is often just one small, tangible action, consistently recorded.
