Posts

The Man Who Chased The Wrong Ghost

Bertram believed he was too smart for hard work. At twenty-six, he had the charm of a snake oil salesman and the patience of a firecracker. While his friends took construction gigs in Port of Spain or drove maxis from San Fernando to town, Bertram sat under a mango tree behind his mother's house in Laventille, rubbing his chin. "Allyuh working too hard," he would say. "The real money ain't in sweat nah. It's in smartness." And smartness, Bertram had in buckets. First, it was the phone repair scheme. He bought broken iPhones from pawn shops, swapped cheap screens on them, and sold them as "refurbished, like brand new." They worked for maybe a week. When customers called him crying, "Bertram, the screen lift up again!" he would block their numbers. "Ent they know is them own once you pay cash?" he laughed with his boys. "Buyer beware, nah. I moving just like them big boys out here" Next came the "import business...

The Weight of Lavender

For three years, Luce did everything right. Every second Tuesday and Thursday, at exactly 7:15 PM, she locked her laptop, muted her work phone, and drove twenty-three minutes to The Still Point,, a wellness studio tucked between a vegan bakery and a crystal shop. The routine never varied: check in with Mara at the front desk, change into the provided cotton robe, and wait in the salt-lamp glow of the relaxation lounge. Her sessions were methodical. Bi-weekly wellness coaching with Samuel, followed by an hour of aromatherapy with either chamomile, frankincense, or, her favorite wild lavender. Samuel would ask her the same questions. "How are you sleeping?" Better. "Have you set boundaries this week?" I told my boss I couldn't work Sunday. "And how did that feel?" Like swallowing glass, but necessary. She dutifully journaled. She diffused eucalyptus in her home office. She bought the weighted blanket, the acupressure mat, the subscription to the meditati...

The Last Place Lucas Looked

Lucas Vargas was tired of trying. For fifteen years, he had done everything the YouTube finance gurus told him to do. He woke up at 5:00 a.m. He visualized his dream bank balance. He wrote fake checks to himself. He listened to manifestation podcasts during his two-hour commute. He cut out coffee, then avocado toast, then his gym membership, then his dignity. And yet, at thirty-seven, he was exactly where he had been at twenty-two: renting a small apartment above a laundromat, driving a car with a check-engine light that had been on for eleven months, and avoiding phone calls from collectors. The worst part was not the debt. The worst part was the exhaustion of trying so hard to feel abundant while his stomach gnawed with the certainty that he was failing. One Tuesday, after yet another rejection email from a job he had overqualified for, Lucas sat on his couch and did something he had not done in years. He stopped. No visualization. No affirmation. No hustle. He just sat in the gray l...

The Architecture of Now

Devika Ramkissoon grew up in a house where time was a deity. Even beyond the Divali holiday, her mother lit a diya every evening at six, the wicks pulling coconut oil toward a flame that had been burning symbolically for generations. Her father recited the Ramayana not from memory but from inheritance, the verses passing through him like blood. The land they gave her, two acres in central Trinidad, was not just soil. It was a promise. "You build a home here," her mother said on her wedding day, pressing a small bag of sacred earth into Devika's palm. "You raise children. You keep the parampara alive." Devika nodded. She meant it. She also knew, somewhere deep, that she would disappoint them. Her husband, Rohan, was a gentle man who repaired air conditioners and asked very little of the universe. When Devika said, on their first night as newlyweds, "I don't want a house," he did not flinch. "What do you want?" he asked. "An apartment ...

Lucy Hates Kicking

Lucy stood outside the gym for twenty-three minutes. She'd watched four people enter. Two lean, one stocky, one muscular, all moving with the casual confidence of people who belonged. Her reflection in the smoked glass door showed someone else entirely: soft around the edges, wearing loose pants she'd bought hoping no one would notice her body. "Just go in," she whispered. The door didn't open. She went home. Ate a bowl of pasta. Scrolled Instagram. Saw a woman with abs like armor plates throwing an elbow. Saved the video. Ate a second bowl of pasta. That was Tuesday. On Thursday, she actually touched the door handle. Her palm was sweating. Inside, she could hear the rhythmic thud of kicks against pads—whap, whap, whap—like a heartbeat she didn't share. A woman opened the door from the inside and nearly collided with her. "Oh, sorry. You coming in?" Lucy froze. The woman was maybe forty, maybe fifty. It was hard to tell. Her face was lined, her arms ...

The Parable of Robert’s Second Shot

Robert sold industrial HVAC filters and repair parts. It was not glamorous work. At cocktail parties, when people asked what he did, their eyes glazed over before he finished saying "airflow resistance ratings." But Robert didn't care about glamour. He cared about tonnage, lead times, and the quiet dignity of a compressor that did not fail at 3:00 PM on a July Friday. He also loved golf. Loved it the way a surgeon loves a clean scalpel, with precision, respect, and zero confusion about its purpose. Robert had two ironclad rules. Rule One: Never talk business on the golf course. Rule Two: Never think about golf in the office. His colleagues thought this was strange. His competitors, when they heard about it, smiled smugly. What a fool, they thought. He's leaving money on the green. See, the other salesmen in the industrial HVAC parts game lived by a different creed. They took clients to country clubs. They closed deals over putts. They bragged about the $200,000 order ...

The Echo on the Corner

 Francisco’s fingers still knew where to go. That was the cruelest part. They would find the neck of his battered violin with the same muscle memory that once made him the highest-paid session player in the city. But now, those fingers performed for loose change outside malls and on busy city street corners, the kind where people walked fast and looked down. He had not started here. At twenty-five, Francisco was a storm in a tailored suit. He played violin in a band that sold out theaters, and he lived as though restraint was an insult to talent. After every show: whiskey until sunrise, women whose names he forgot by noon, and a breakfast of cigarettes and pride. He called it the artist's tax. Everyone paid it, he told himself. By forty, the band broke up, his fault, mostly. He showed up late, played sloppy, argued with promoters. But he still had his name. He still had his violin. Surely, someone would call. No one called. He took pickup gigs. Wedding quartets, cruise ships, a sad...