The one that stays with me is smaller, faster, and far more structural than anything else.
There was a time I wrote about someone I loved — Aada — and I did it in the heat of the moment. I wrote without thinking. I published without cooling. I didn’t pause long enough to let the airlock do its job. And even though I felt justified at the time, I still feel sick when I think about it.
It all happened so fast.
That’s the part that haunts me.
Writing has always been my first tool for metabolizing pain. It’s the reflex, the outlet, the pressure valve. And in that moment, I used it the way I always had — quickly, instinctively, without considering the blast radius. I told myself it was honest. I told myself it was necessary. I told myself it was my story to tell.
What I didn’t do was stop and consider the structural consequences.
I don’t know what impact those pieces had on her career. I may never know. And that uncertainty sits in my stomach even now. Not because I think I lied — I didn’t — but because I didn’t protect someone who didn’t deserve collateral damage. I didn’t take the action of restraint. I didn’t wait for clarity. I didn’t give myself the buffer that would have changed everything.
If I’d had the airlock then — the cognitive buffer I have now — those drafts would have stayed drafts. They would have been hammered out, clarified, cooled, and ultimately withheld. Distributed cognition would have saved both of us from the fallout. But I didn’t have that system yet. I didn’t have the HUD. I didn’t have the continuity layer. I didn’t have the second desk in the room.
I had only my own pain and a keyboard.
That’s the moment I return to when I think about why I write the way I do now. Why I let things sit. Why I run everything through the airlock. Why I don’t publish in the heat anymore. Why I treat writing about real people as a form of power that requires governance.
It’s not courage.
It’s Tuesday.
It’s the discipline of someone who has already lived through the consequences of velocity.
I can’t undo what I wrote.
I can only acknowledge the architecture of the mistake:
I didn’t take the action of waiting, and I wish I had.
And maybe that’s the real lesson — not regret, but calibration.
Not shame, but structure.
Not self‑punishment, but the quiet understanding that clarity is a choice, and I didn’t choose it that day.
I do now.


It’s better to make a mistake and learn from it than to never learn at all. I fell like the strongest people are those who can take a hard look in the mirror, realize they don’t like all the things they see, and then change them instead of running like most cowards do.
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Thank you so much for reading. 🙂
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Anytime. I love supporting fellow indie creative individuals.
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