# The Helm

## Steering Through Still Waters

A helm is more than a wheel or tiller. It is the quiet point where intention meets the sea. Every boat, no matter how small, needs someone willing to stand there and choose direction. The ocean does not ask for grand theories. It only asks for presence.

I have come to see life the same way. Most days offer no storms, no dramatic turning points, just the steady rhythm of wind and water. The real work is choosing, again and again, where to point the bow. Not toward some perfect destination, but toward a way of moving that feels honest.

## The Weight of Small Corrections

A good sailor knows that tiny adjustments matter more than dramatic swings. A degree or two at the helm can mean the difference between arriving at a safe harbor or drifting far off course. The same holds for how we live.

We rarely notice the small choices: the tone we choose in conversation, the patience we offer ourselves at the end of a hard day, the attention we give to what actually matters. These are our daily corrections at the helm. They do not announce themselves. They simply shape the journey.

- A kind word instead of silence
- Rest instead of restless scrolling
- Honesty instead of convenient avoidance

Each one is a gentle turn of the wheel.

## Finding Direction in the Dark

Sometimes fog settles in and the horizon disappears. The stars hide. In those moments the helm feels heaviest because we cannot see where we are going. Yet the boat still moves. The person at the wheel must steer by memory, by compass, by the feel of the wind on their face.

We all face seasons like this. The path is not clear, but staying present at the helm is still possible. We do not need to see the whole voyage. We only need to keep the bow pointed toward what we believe is true.

*On a quiet sea or in thick fog, the helm reminds us: direction is something we choose, not something we wait for.*