What I Want My Work to Feed
I want my work to feed something. Not only my bills, though those matter. I want it to feed courage, curiosity, conversation, culture, and a deeper sense of possibility.
The story inside the ordinary
Work should not only extract from me. It should also return meaning, connection, and room to grow.
I keep returning to this kind of observation because ordinary life is rarely empty. It carries class, gender, memory, access, comfort, history, and the small decisions people make every day. When I pay attention to those details, the world gets more textured.
This connects naturally with women and rest, solo travel confidence, and community resilience. These are not separate conversations for me. Food, travel, culture, rest, and storytelling keep meeting each other in real life.
What this reveals about people
What I love most is the way this topic points back to people. A street, meal, bench, market, room, or conversation is never only itself. It reveals who feels welcome, who does the work, who gets remembered, and who has to fight to be seen.
That is the heart of DG Speaks for me. I am not only interested in what looks good. I want to know what it means, who shaped it, and why it deserves care.
Where this fits into travel and daily life
Practical resources can support a more intentional life. Depending on the moment, I may turn to Calm for quiet practice and my Amazon shop for everyday tools. The point is not to collect links or things. The point is to make the road, the table, and the work a little easier to enter with care.
Even when I am writing about something simple, I am asking a bigger question. How do we live with more attention? How do we enjoy beauty without ignoring truth? How do we make room for ourselves and for one another?
The bigger lesson
The work I want is rooted in truth and wide enough to hold joy.
The more I write, the more I believe that everyday life is full of clues. If I slow down, those clues become stories. If I tell the stories honestly, they become a kind of map.
You might also enjoy DG Speaks Travel, DG Speaks Food, and DG Speaks Culture.
