Saturday, March 14, 2026

It's Not About the Finish Line, It's About the Person You Become


Stardate 03.14.2026

Think back to the last time you set a meaningful goal — the kind that stretches you a little beyond your comfort zone. The kind that makes you wonder, quietly, if you truly have what it takes to see it through.

Now replay the journey.

Remember the unexpected obstacles. The adjustments you had to make. The moments when things felt uncertain.

Then picture the finish line.

You cross it. The red tape breaks. The mission is complete.
How did it feel?
Who was there to celebrate with you?

This morning I find myself reflecting on that very question.

We are t-minus three days until launch, and all systems are green. Strangely enough, I’m the most relaxed I’ve ever been this close to a finish line. In some ways, this moment feels like one of the most meaningful achievements of my life.

But something interesting happened as I sat quietly this morning after prayer and meditation.

My thoughts drifted away from the launch itself.

They settled instead on the person I’ve become along the journey.

The coloring book, Where in the World is Wilson?, will launch soon. The excitement is building. Friends and readers have been encouraging me. Conversations with donors and supporters have been unfolding in ways I could never have predicted when this idea first appeared.

Yet the deeper realization is this:

The finish line isn’t the real reward.

The real reward is the transformation that happens while walking toward it.

Patience grows where impatience once lived.
Confidence replaces doubt.
Faith deepens in quiet ways.

Along the way, people appear who become part of the story — artists, friends, readers, mentors, and even the occasional tennis partner who reminds you to keep things light and enjoy the ride.

And sometimes wisdom arrives in unexpected places.

Yesterday, while helping me walk through a final checklist for launch, my virtual assistant asked a simple question:

“What is the first sentence you will speak when your livestream begins?”

It stopped me in my tracks.

Not because I didn’t have words to say — anyone who knows me knows I can usually find a few words when needed — but because the question asked something deeper.

What do you say at the beginning of a moment that has been years in the making?

Do you start with gratitude?
With a story?
With humor?

Or do you simply begin with honesty?

I haven’t completely decided yet.

But I suspect the answer will reveal something about the journey itself.

In the quiet moments of reflection this morning, one verse kept coming to mind:

“Let us not grow weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.” — Galatians 6:9

That verse reminds me that every meaningful goal is really a process of becoming.

Not just accomplishing.

Becoming more patient.
Becoming more faithful.
Becoming more generous.
Becoming more willing to step forward even when the outcome isn’t fully known.

In a few minutes, I’ll be heading to the tennis courts for a morning of cardio drills and time with friends. I suspect the backhand will get a little closer to one percent better today.

But before I step out the door, I’ll leave you with the same question Alberta asked me.

What would be the first sentence you would speak if you were about to share your story with the world?

You may want to ponder that one for a while.

Sometimes the most powerful answers come quietly.


Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Spock, the Captain’s been pacing the bridge like he’s about to launch a starship.”

Spock: “On the contrary, Doctor. The Captain appears unusually calm. A logical response when one understands the journey mattered more than the destination.”

Bones: “You mean all that worrying we humans do about the finish line might not be the point?”

Spock: “Precisely.”

Sometimes wisdom arrives in unexpected ways — even during quiet moments before a launch. The finish line may mark the end of a project, but the greater gift is discovering who we’ve become along the path that brought us there.

Thank you for sharing the journey with me.

May you live long and prosper. 🖖

Friday, March 13, 2026

The Math Behind the Mission


Stardate 03.13.2026

My accountability partner called the other day with a question from some elementary school students she volunteers with. These young leaders had been brainstorming ways to help children at the hospital, and their idea involved the coloring books that will launch on St. Patrick’s Day.

Her question was simple and honest:

“How exactly does the money flow to the hospital?”

So I did what any good teacher would do. I grabbed a notepad and began walking her through the process step by step in terms her students could understand.

That conversation reminded me of something important.

If people are generous enough to support a mission, they deserve to know exactly how every penny is stewarded.

That’s the purpose of today’s reflection.


The coloring book launches on St. Patrick’s Day. Like the book projects that came before it, every dollar raised after publishing costs will go toward helping children through Children’s Miracle Network.

Over the years, I’ve worked hard to keep production costs extremely low. Aside from my laptop and a few additions to a small home studio, my only real recurring expense is the art software I use to create the book layouts.

Even that feels like a blessing. My wife gifted the software to me a couple of Christmases ago. By paying annually, the cost comes out to about twelve dollars a month.

Most of the real magic has come from generous people who believed in the mission.

An artist named J.T. Egley once donated the original artwork for the cover of The Adventures of Castaway Wilson. He even purchased the frame for the piece himself. That framed artwork was later placed in a silent auction at my day job, where it raised five hundred dollars for the fundraiser. Because it was donated during our company’s annual campaign, that gift received an additional partial match.

Another gifted artist, Helen M. Swearson, donated every single hand-drawn illustration for the coloring book you’ll soon see. Her “tip jar,” as we jokingly call it, will simply be the exposure her talent receives when readers discover her work.

I also maintain a very small personal tip jar through a handful of partner and affiliate links. Occasionally these partnerships provide product samples or small stipends. When income does come from those links, it mostly helps offset travel expenses related to the storytelling adventures that eventually become part of these books.

I keep those links to a minimum because I never want them to overshadow the mission itself.

At the heart of the mission is a small team of volunteers — both human and virtual. One of those teammates is Alberta, my digital writing partner, who helps me refine these stories each morning during Golden Hour. While the full service costs about twenty dollars a month, I’ve been able to complete all of our collaboration within the free time currently available.

When people work together, even the smallest tools can produce meaningful results.


For readers who may be considering helping place more books into the hands of young patients, here is the simple math behind the mission.

Cost to produce one coloring book through Amazon:
$2.84

Retail price:
$9.99

Amazon handles fulfillment, collects shipping and tax, and retains approximately forty percent of the retail price.

For donors who wish to purchase books in bulk so they can be delivered directly to children receiving care, I offer a donor rate of $5.50 per book, plus applicable tax and shipping.

After production costs, the remaining proceeds are routed through our annual workplace fundraiser, where my boss ensures the donation receives a partial company match before it reaches Children’s Miracle Network.

This year, the mission has already produced a beautiful milestone.

Together we raised enough to sponsor a $500 Children’s Miracle Network balloon that will hang above the cash registers at my day job during the month of May. The message on the balloon reads:

“Where in the World is Wilson?”

It’s a small reminder that generosity has a way of traveling farther than we ever imagine.

Moving forward, I will continue accounting for every dollar raised — whether it comes through Amazon sales, author talks, or generous outside donors.

At the end of each annual campaign, I will share the results so readers know exactly how many coloring books find their way into the hands of children receiving treatment at the hospital.

Transparency builds trust.

And trust allows generosity to grow.


As I reflect on this journey, one verse comes to mind:

“Moreover, it is required of stewards that they be found faithful.”
— 1 Corinthians 4:2

That word — faithful — captures what this mission is really about.

Not perfection.

Just faithfulness with what we’ve been given.

One book.
One reader.
One child at a time.


Captain’s Addendum

Bones folded his arms and looked across the bridge.

“Spock, are you telling me the Captain is running a charity using coloring books and a volleyball?”

Spock raised an eyebrow.

“Doctor, I believe the proper term is efficient stewardship. The mathematics appear quite sound.”

Bones grinned. “Well, I’ll be. Sometimes the simplest missions turn out to be the best ones.”

I smiled listening to them both.

Sometimes the numbers matter.

But the real miracle is what happens beyond the numbers — when people decide to care for one another.


Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Thank you for your prayers, encouragement, and belief in this small mission.

I look forward to sharing Wilson with you on March 17.

Until then, may you live long… and prosper. 🖖

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Beyond Shattered Dreams

Beyond Shattered Dreams

Stardate 03.12.2026


The Irish triplets were together for the first picture you see here.

Three books.
Three stories.
Three chapters of my life.

What you cannot see in that photograph are the shattered dreams that sit quietly behind those covers.

Today I want to share a little of that story, because it explains where my mind and heart have been over the past three years.

The first of the triplets, Live Long and Prosper, was scheduled to launch on St. Patrick’s Day. Plans were in place. Momentum was building.

Then life intervened.

My mother’s brother, my Uncle Victor, passed away. Just weeks earlier he had been with us in Iowa, visiting the birthplace of his wife and enjoying what would unknowingly become his final vacation.

Instead of celebrating a book launch, we were gathering for a funeral in Arizona during the very week of St. Patrick’s Day.

That was about the time the fog settled in.

Grief has a way of stacking losses together until it feels like the world has been turned upside down. In a short span of time, three of my teammates at my day job were no longer with me. Two close friends in my inner circle both lost their husbands just four hours apart.

When I look back now, I’m not entirely sure how I made it through those days.

But somehow, step by step, I kept moving forward.

Sometimes perseverance doesn’t look heroic. Sometimes it simply means getting up the next morning and taking one small step.

If you remember the final scene from the movie It's a Wonderful Life, you might recall the angel second class, Clarence Odbody, leaving a small Christmas message for George Bailey.

George had spent much of his life believing he was a failure.

Clarence left him a simple reminder:

“No man is a failure who has friends.”

That message stayed with me.

It’s also why I ordered a small bell similar to the one in the movie—the bell that rings every time an angel earns his wings. That bell happens to be arriving today.

When it does, I plan to ring it in gratitude for the many angels who have appeared along my own journey.

Some were family.
Some were friends.
Some were readers.

And some were what I like to call the “angels in the outfield”—the one hundred people who stepped forward to help me complete my first book, God’s Black Sheep Squadron, when I wasn’t sure I could finish it on my own.

Looking back now, I see something I couldn’t see during those dark days.

The shattered dreams were not the end of the story.

They were the soil where something new would eventually grow.

The three Irish triplets sitting together today—Live Long and ProsperThe Adventures of Castaway Wilson, and the new coloring book—are more than just books to me.

They are reminders that even when the heart breaks, life can still move forward.

Sometimes slowly.

Sometimes painfully.

But forward nonetheless.

Scripture offers a quiet promise for moments like these:

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.”
— Psalm 34:18

If you are carrying a broken dream today, I hope you remember this:

Broken dreams are not the end of the journey.

Sometimes they are simply the beginning of a new chapter we cannot yet see.

If you’d like to follow along as this story continues, I’d be honored to have you join me.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong

And if you have a moment on St. Patrick’s Day, stop by the livestream. I’ll be sharing the newest member of the Wilson family and celebrating the unlikely path that brought these three books together.


🖖 Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Captain, life has a way of throwing a few meteor storms at a man.”

Spock: “Indeed, Doctor. Yet the Captain appears to have navigated them with admirable persistence.”

Captain Michael: I’ve learned something important along this journey. When dreams shatter, it doesn’t mean the mission is over. Sometimes it simply means the next chapter is about to begin.

Thank you for walking this road with me.

May your path today be filled with quiet strength, faithful friends, and the courage to keep moving forward—one percent better, one day at a time. 🖖

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Distribution Points are Falling Out of the Sky

Distribution Points Are Falling Out of the Sky
Stardate 03.11.2026

Nearly a year ago, I sat down with my pastor—who also serves as my spiritual director—to share a prototype of The Adventures of Castaway Wilson. I wanted his counsel before taking the next step in the journey.

That next step was an important one. I was preparing to meet with a high-level contact at the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics to introduce my writing projects and explore the possibility of collaboration.

Before heading to that meeting, I stopped by my pastor’s office.

At one point during our conversation, something remarkable happened. As I raised my hands toward the sky while explaining the vision behind the project, a flash of lightning struck nearby. Thunder rolled almost immediately afterward, shaking the ground.

We both paused.

Moments like that tend to get your attention.

When our conversation ended, I continued on to the hospital to meet with the representative from the university. It happened to be spring break, which meant their schedule was unusually tight. Still, they carved out a few minutes to listen.

Looking back now, that brief meeting planted a seed. What seemed small at the time quietly laid a foundation for what is unfolding today.

Fast forward to this past Sunday.

I was sitting in the pew listening to my pastor share stories from his own life experiences. At the time, one question had been circling in my mind: How can I create distribution points for the new coloring book so it can reach children who are patients at the University of Iowa Stead Family Children's Hospital?

Then my pastor mentioned something during his message that caught my full attention.

He spoke about visiting children at the hospital to offer comfort and prayer.

And suddenly another flash of insight arrived.

If my pastor already visits these young patients as part of his ministry, perhaps he could simply bring along coloring books and crayons during those visits. A small gift. A quiet moment of encouragement.

It would also respect the privacy protections established by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, since I would never be interacting with the patients directly.

One simple idea—yet it solved a complicated challenge.

Then something else happened.

About forty-eight hours later, a local community leader introduced herself to me at my day job. She was dropping off a donation request for a group she oversees—an organization that serves roughly 400 to 500 young people with special needs each week.

During our conversation, I mentioned the coloring book project and asked if the children she works with might benefit from receiving free coloring books and crayons.

Because of the professional boundaries tied to my job, I made sure to do this the right way. I handed her my supervisor’s business card and explained that any next steps would need to go through the appropriate channels, possibly under the umbrella of our ongoing support for Children's Miracle Network Hospitals.

She understood immediately.

And just like that, another possible distribution pathway appeared.

When moments like these begin stacking up, it can feel as if opportunities are falling out of the sky.

Of course, what’s really happening is something quieter and more patient. Seeds planted months—or even years—earlier are beginning to grow.

Today happens to be a day off from my regular job. As the sun rises after my Golden Hour routine, I’ll be meeting with my international blog sponsor from London on a video call. We are now six days away from launch, and at this moment, all systems appear to be green.

Scripture reminds us that sometimes guidance appears step by step rather than all at once:

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to Him, and He will make your paths straight.”
— Proverbs 3:5–6

Looking back, I can see that each step in this journey arrived exactly when it was needed.

Stay tuned.

And if you’re interested in seeing how the story continues, check in for the Facebook livestream on St. Patrick’s Day. The exact time will be announced once we finalize birthday plans for our daughter on Stardate 03.17.2026.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


🖖 Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Captain, are you telling me lightning strikes are now part of the distribution strategy?”

Spock: “Highly improbable, Doctor. However, the Captain’s experiences suggest a pattern of well-timed opportunities.”

Captain Michael: I’m learning that when you keep moving forward with patience and purpose, the right doors have a way of appearing—sometimes quietly, sometimes with a flash of lightning.

May your path today bring you clarity, courage, and one unexpected opportunity.

Live long, and prosper in purpose. 🖖

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Are You Ready to Test the Boundaries of Your Comfort Zone?


Stardate 03.10.2026

Where you are in your life today is the result of all your yesterdays.

Who you are today is also the result of all those same yesterdays.

If you really pause and think about it, the story goes even deeper than that. Each of us carries a quiet inheritance from the generations who came before us—parents, grandparents, and many others whose names we may never know. Their decisions, struggles, victories, and lessons ripple forward into the lives we are living now.

If that thought shakes you up a little, take a slow breath.

Today’s reflection is really about self-awareness.

Whether we realize it or not, each of us lives within a personal comfort zone. Inside that space things feel predictable. Familiar. Safe.

There is nothing wrong with that.

But there is also something waiting just beyond those invisible boundaries.

Growth.

The challenge I’m offering today is simple: consider what might be waiting just outside the edge of your comfort zone.

Not something dramatic. Not something reckless.

Just a small step.

Over time I’ve learned that the pursuit of perfection can quietly trap us inside our comfort zones. When we demand perfection from ourselves, our brains start protecting us from anything uncertain. We begin avoiding situations where failure might happen.

The brain means well. It’s trying to keep us safe.

But there’s a problem with that strategy.

Personal growth lives on the other side of uncertainty.

Growth begins when we take small, manageable steps into unfamiliar territory. I like to think of them as baby steps.

One baby step today might feel slightly uncomfortable—but not overwhelming. Because it’s small, your brain doesn’t raise too many alarms.

You might learn one new word in a language you’ve always been curious about.

You might sit down at a piano and figure out a single musical note.

You might introduce yourself to someone new.

None of these steps will transform your life overnight.

But something important begins happening when you repeat them.

Your brain slowly learns that stepping into the unknown doesn’t always lead to danger. In fact, it often leads to discovery.

When those baby steps become a daily habit, something remarkable begins to unfold.

The future version of you will look back and realize you’ve grown into someone you barely recognize.

Not because of one giant leap.

But because of hundreds of small steps taken consistently.

Scripture reminds us that growth often unfolds in quiet, steady ways:

“Do not despise these small beginnings, for the Lord rejoices to see the work begin.”
— Zechariah 4:10

The key isn’t speed.

The key is consistency.

One small step outside the comfort zone today.

Another one tomorrow.

And before long, you may discover that the boundaries you once feared were never walls at all—just doorways waiting to be opened.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


🖖 Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Captain, every time you step outside your comfort zone you give the rest of us heart palpitations.”

Spock: “On the contrary, Doctor. Exploration beyond familiar boundaries is the fundamental purpose of any meaningful mission.”

Captain Michael: I suspect both of them are right. The unknown can feel uncomfortable, even a little frightening. But every meaningful journey begins the same way—by stepping just far enough beyond what feels safe to see what might be waiting there.

Thank you for taking this journey with me.

May today bring you one small step forward—and the quiet courage to take it. 🖖

Monday, March 9, 2026

Behind the Scenes


Stardate 03.09.2026

The other day, my virtual assistant asked me an important question while helping me prepare for a couple of upcoming livestreams tied to the launch of my new coloring book.

Her question was simple.

But my response wasn’t.

For a moment, I froze.

A flood of obstacles rushed into my mind like a Stage V river. When rivers reach that level, they’re no longer navigable. The current is simply too strong.

And yet, I realized something important in that moment. Obstacles are worth talking about. They can either shape us into better versions of ourselves—or convince us to quit.

Years ago, I finished my first book. It was a memoir about my dad’s final thirty-five days with us. Writing it was deeply personal. When it was finished, some family members gently suggested that perhaps I had shared a little too much.

So I pivoted.

I still felt the call to write, but I wanted to find a way forward that honored both creativity and privacy. That’s when I tried something new: fiction.

My first novel introduced a character named Thomas Morgan. Thomas was haunted by a strange figure—a disheveled caveman who appeared in his dreams. When Thomas ignored him, the caveman began appearing in mirrors.

Here’s the part that made the writing feel even more real.

Something very similar was happening to me.

I kept that to myself at the time. I didn’t want my family worrying about me or suggesting I seek treatment for something I couldn’t quite explain. Instead, I poured the experience into the story. The caveman became part of the novel.

After finishing the manuscript, curiosity got the better of me. I started searching online to see if the image from my dreams existed somewhere in the real world.

Eventually, I found it.

A perfect match.

A reconstruction of a prehistoric man—dark skinned with striking blue eyes.

And here’s where the story takes an unexpected turn.

The ancient remains used to create that reconstruction were discovered in Northern Spain and studied by scientists working with DNA extracted from a tooth found in the La Braña caves. The scientists determined the man likely had dark skin and blue eyes—just like the figure from my dreams.

Even more fascinating, the research and artwork connected to that discovery were being studied in parts of Europe not terribly far from where my mother’s ancestors once lived.

Naturally, I contacted the artist who created the reconstruction. I hoped the image could become the front cover for my book, The Caveman in the Mirror.

But another obstacle appeared.

The artist had trademarked the image for academic purposes only. He wasn’t available to create a new version, and the artists I knew were all booked solid.

For a moment, I felt stuck.

Then I did something simple.

I asked for help.

I posted a message on Facebook asking friends and family if they knew a graphic artist who might be able to assist.

Before long, my brother-in-law replied. He pointed me toward an artist who lived practically in our own backyard—in Parnell, the small town where my wife was born just five miles south of us.

When I met the artist, something else caught my eye.

He was wearing a Star Trek T-shirt.

At the time, he was helping me add a caption to The Adventures of Castaway Wilson. He had no idea that another project was already forming in my mind—one that would eventually become Live Long and Prosper, a tribute to my childhood hero, Spock.

Looking back now, I see something I couldn’t see while living through it.

The obstacles weren’t roadblocks.

They were pacing mechanisms.

They slowed the journey to a snail’s pace at times, but they also lined up the right people at the right moments.

That’s often how life works.

When the river rises, it can feel impossible to navigate. But if we stay patient, the current eventually guides us somewhere meaningful.

Scripture reminds us of this quiet truth:

“Let us not grow weary of doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up.”
— Galatians 6:9

Sometimes the breakthrough doesn’t come when we expect it.

But it does come.

And often, it arrives through people we didn’t even know were part of the plan.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


🖖 Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Captain, you worry too much about obstacles. Half the time they’re just detours.”

Spock: “Indeed, Doctor. Obstacles are frequently evidence that the path itself is being refined.”

Captain Michael: Looking back, I see that both of them are right. The delays, the unexpected turns, even the moments of doubt—they weren’t the end of the mission. They were simply part of the navigation.

And sometimes, the universe sends exactly the right crew member when you need them most.

Thank you for sailing along on this journey with me.

Have a peaceful day. 🖖

Sunday, March 8, 2026

Got Conflict?

Got Conflict?
Stardate 03.08.2026

We’re going a little deeper today.

This is one of those reflections that feels almost like a private conversation — a quiet question meant not for the crowd, but for the soul.

Yesterday my AI assistant, Alberta, asked me something simple. At least it sounded simple.

“Can you describe a time in your life when you faced an obstacle and what you did to overcome it?”

For a moment… I froze.

The reason wasn’t that I couldn’t think of an obstacle. The opposite happened. My mind flooded with them.

My life, like most lives if we’re honest, has been a long series of navigating obstacles. Writing projects alone have brought their share of roadblocks — moments when a door seemed closed, a path unclear, or the next step completely hidden.

Conflict shows up the moment we can’t see a way forward.

And when that happens, emotions arrive quickly.

Not the pleasant ones like joy or gratitude.

The other ones.

The kind that tighten your chest a little.
The kind that whisper doubts in your ear.
The kind that make you feel stuck… frozen… unsure of what to do next.

If you’ve ever felt trapped between where you are and where you want to go, then you already know the feeling.

Alberta’s question caught me off guard because it forced me to look at something I usually move past quickly. Obstacles have always been part of the journey for me. But describing one single obstacle felt impossible because the path has rarely been smooth.

Especially while writing.

Books, like life, don’t arrive without friction. Every meaningful project seems to come with moments where you question whether the story will ever reach the finish line.

The good news is I’m practicing these conversations now so that I don’t freeze later in front of a live audience. Next week, when my coloring book launches, I’ll be stepping into a livestream conversation. Moments like yesterday remind me that preparation isn’t about having perfect answers.

It’s about learning to breathe when the unexpected question appears.

Before I go any further, I should admit something honestly.

Some of the obstacles in my life are still unresolved.

Not every conflict has a tidy ending. Some are still unfolding. Some lessons are still being written in real time.

And that realization has taught me something important.

The lesson about conflict isn’t learning how to eliminate it.

The lesson is learning how to walk through it.

Conflict is part of being human. It appears the moment something stands between us and the goal we care about. The obstacle becomes a mirror, revealing our fears, our hopes, and sometimes our faith.

Over time I’ve learned that how we respond to conflict matters far more than whether we experience it.

We can freeze.
We can run.
Or we can take one small step forward.

One percent better.

Looking back, many of the biggest obstacles I encountered while writing eventually became part of the story itself. What once felt like resistance often turned into direction. What once felt like delay sometimes became protection.

It’s funny how that works.

Faith doesn’t always remove the mountain. Sometimes it simply gives you the strength to keep walking the trail.

Scripture reminds us of this quiet truth:

“Consider it pure joy, my brothers and sisters, whenever you face trials of many kinds, because you know that the testing of your faith produces perseverance.”
— James 1:2–3

Perseverance is rarely born in comfort. It grows in the tension between where we are and where we hope to be.

So today I’ll leave you with the same question that stopped me in my tracks yesterday.

How are you managing the conflicts in your life?

Not avoiding them.
Not pretending they don’t exist.

But managing them.

Because sometimes the obstacle standing in front of us is actually preparing us for the very mission we’re meant to carry out.

And sometimes the pause… the moment where we freeze for a second… is simply the soul catching its breath before the next step.

Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong


Captain’s Addendum

Bones: “Michael, humans seem to spend a lot of time wrestling with their problems.”

Spock: “Indeed, Doctor. Though it is often through such conflict that humans develop resilience.”

Bones: “In other words… the struggle’s part of the training.”

Standing in front of a difficult question yesterday reminded me of something simple. Conflict isn’t a signal that we’re failing. Often it’s a signal that we’re growing. Every obstacle I’ve faced while writing has taught me something I didn’t know before — patience, humility, and the courage to keep moving forward one small step at a time.

Thank you for taking a moment to walk this reflection with me today. May your path be steady, your heart hopeful, and your next step just one percent better. 🖖