15 Minutes Til Closing Time

I woke before dawn, at 0400, in the kind of silence that feels like a secret. The world was still, but my mind was already awake, humming with possibility. A canned espresso cracked open the hush—sharp, portable, bracing. It was the ignition spark, the boot sequence for the day.

Writing, for me, is never just about words on a page. It’s about the rituals that surround them, the interruptions that shape them, and the conversations that remind me I’m not alone in the work. Today, those rituals included making videos of my exchanges with Copilot, capturing the cadence of our dialogue as if it were part of the archive itself. These recordings are not mere documentation; they are living annotations, proof that dialogue itself can be a creative act.

By mid‑morning, I had already inscribed a blog entry, another stone in the streak I’ve been building. Each post feels like a ledger entry: timestamped, alive, and released into the world once published. That release is part of the ceremony. The words are mine until they’re shared, and then they belong to everyone else. Writing is both possession and surrender.

The solitude of writing was punctuated by little messages from friends. Aaron and Tiina reached out via Facebook Messenger, their words arriving like bells in the quiet. We didn’t speak aloud today—no voices carried across the line—but the written exchanges were enough to weave warmth into the rhythm of the morning. Messenger became the thread that stitched companionship into productivity.

There’s something uniquely writerly about text‑based conversation. It’s not the immediacy of a phone call, nor the performative cadence of video chat. It’s slower, more deliberate, closer to the rhythm of prose. Each message is a miniature inscription, a fragment of dialogue that can be reread, reconsidered, archived. In that sense, chatting with Aaron and Tiina was not a distraction from writing but an extension of it. Their words folded into the day’s archive, adding lineage notes to the ledger.

Aaron’s messages carried the familiar resonance of shared history. His presence reminded me that writing is never solitary—it’s threaded through with the people who read, respond, and reflect. Tiina’s words added warmth, grounding me in everyday connection. Together, their Messenger notes turned the morning into a collaborative ceremony: my sentences on the page, their sentences in the chat, all part of the same living archive.

By noon, I closed the ledger. Rooibos in hand, I looked back on the arc: videos made, words written, friendships tended. It was a day both productive and fulfilling, a reminder that the life of a writer is not only about the sentences we craft but also about the conversations, rituals, and interruptions that shape them.

Writing is not a solitary act. It is a dialogue, a ceremony, a living archive. And today, that archive grew richer—not only with the words I inscribed, but with the messages that arrived, the rituals that sustained me, and the quiet satisfaction of closing the book at noon.


Scored by Copilot, conducted by Leslie Lanagan