Step One

Some chase a word all their lives.
They carve it into notebooks, underline it in old books, fold it into conversations where it does not belong. They treat it as a future inheritance: a thing waiting for them at the end of some narrow hallway where at last everything will make sense.

They call the word enlightenment, though over time it becomes less a word and more an atmosphere around them, a quiet vapor they are certain they must breathe before life can properly begin.

In their imagination, it lives across the street. A storefront with its lights always on, no customers, no movement inside, the door unlocked but never opened. They wait at the curb, rehearsing the moment when the sign flickers just so, and the universe finally waves them in.

They do not cross. They do not look for another way around. They simply wait for the world to rearrange itself into something more welcoming. The waiting becomes a ritual. The ritual becomes a belief. The belief becomes a cage made of soft materials— comfortable, familiar, and nearly invisible.

During all this, a pair of shoes rests by the door.

Plain.
Unimpressed by the size of the task. They do not glow. They do not hum. They do not carry ancient knowledge or promise a revelation at the end of the road.

They simply wait to be used.

Not by the perfected version of you, not by the you who has finished becoming, but by the person standing in this moment with nothing but a direction and a need to move.

The shoes do not concern themselves with whether you are ready, or worthy, or certain. They do not ask for a vow, only for the first step.

The world across the street may never open. The clerk with your answers may not exist. The right moment may not arrive no matter how long you negotiate with it.

But the shoes are still here.
Unmoved.
unchanged.
Inviting without speaking.

Everything you think you need might already be inside the step you refuse to take.