I sat alone in a car in the middle of a dirt parking lot, the wind whispering an end to my pain. Addiction had stolen my hope, and I was ready to let go. That night was my rock bottom—the quiet, heavy moment that forced me to confront everything I had been running from. It didn’t feel dramatic. It was quiet. Terrifying. And it became a turning point I still measure my life against.

My journey has been messy. Heartbreak, failure, chaos, addiction, near-death experiences—they’ve all left their mark. I’ve stumbled, fallen, and sometimes barely recognized the person I was becoming. I didn’t fall apart all at once. I drifted. And then, slowly, I started paying attention.

Ash to Aim exists as a place to write through that process. Not as a guide, and not as a solution—but as an honest record of what it feels like to confront your life without shortcuts. Some days that meant sitting with discomfort. Some days it meant showing up for something small. Other days it meant staying present when everything in me wanted to escape.

I write here to document what it’s been like to face the mess, confront failure, and keep going anyway. Stories of solo hikes that taught me to be present. Nights sitting in silence that forced reflection. Moments I wanted to run from but didn’t. Those are the moments I return to, because they’re the ones that changed me.

If you’re here, reading this, you’re not alone in the uncertainty. Whether you’re rebuilding after addiction, loss, or a season of drifting, this space is meant to be steady. Not polished. Not resolved. Just honest.

This is not about quick fixes or motivation. It’s about the slow, unfinished work of becoming someone you can trust yourself to live as—one day at a time.