# The Helm ## Steering Through Still Waters A helm is not the ship itself, nor the wind that fills its sails. It is the quiet point of decision. A hand on the wheel, a small turn, and the whole vessel changes course. In that simplicity lies something honest about how we live. Most of our days are not made of dramatic storms or heroic rescues. They are made of small corrections, chosen again and again, often when no one is watching. I have come to think of attention as a kind of helm. Where we choose to place it, moment after moment, determines the direction our lives eventually travel. We cannot control the weather or the currents, but we can decide what we keep our eyes on. A steady gaze toward what matters, even when the horizon looks the same for miles, slowly brings us to new places. ## The Weight of Small Hands My grandfather kept an old wooden ship's wheel mounted on the wall of his study. As a boy I would stand on a chair and grip the spokes with both hands, pretending I was captain of an ocean liner. He never laughed at the game. Instead he would stand behind me, place one calm hand over mine, and say, "Easy now. The sea feels every touch." Years later I understood he was not talking about the sea. He was talking about family, about promises, about the slow work of becoming a decent man. The wheel taught him that strength is not force. It is steadiness. ## What We Hold On To In the end a helm asks only one question: where are you taking us? The answer is never given once. It is spoken every time we choose patience over anger, attention over distraction, courage over comfort. - We steer toward the people we love by remembering them when it is inconvenient. - We steer toward integrity by keeping small promises to ourselves. - We steer toward peace by refusing to meet every wave with another wave. The wheel does not move by itself. Someone must stand there, quiet and responsible, ready to make the next small adjustment. *On this quiet Independence Day in 2026, may we all hold the helm with gentler hands.*