Stardate 03.23.2026
It started in the most unexpected way.
A volleyball fell out of a family van and dribbled into my life at a time when I felt completely stuck. I was dealing with a severe case of writer’s block, unsure of what to do next or where the story was headed.
Then Wilson showed up.
What began as a simple, almost comical moment turned into something much more. He became my traveling companion. Everywhere we went, people smiled. Conversations started. Walls came down. And somewhere along the way, those smiles began lifting my own spirits.
Wilson didn’t just give me a story.
He gave me momentum.
But then, just as unexpectedly as he arrived…
I lost him.
That loss hit harder than I ever anticipated. What started as something light and playful turned into something deeply personal. I felt it. The absence. The silence. The weight of it.
And for a while, I sank.
Until something happened that I still can’t fully explain.
Along a quiet trail near Blarney Castle, I saw it—a red volleyball, floating gently in the river.
In that moment, everything shifted.
It wasn’t the same Wilson. But it didn’t need to be.
Because what I realized in that moment was this:
Wilson was never just something I carried.
He had already become part of me.
And from that point on, the journey changed.
The coloring book is now one week old.
And I find myself sitting in a place of quiet amazement at what’s already unfolding.
Lives are being touched.
Conversations are happening.
Doors are opening.
But more importantly, something deeper is becoming clear:
This is no longer just my project.
When something is real… other people begin to carry it.
I saw that clearly when I learned about thirty elementary school students who held a bake sale to raise money for patients at a children’s hospital. They didn’t have to do that. No one told them to. They simply chose to help.
And then something even more powerful happened.
Kiwanis International stepped in and matched their $300 with another $300—doubling the impact and expanding what those kids had already started.
Kids helping kids.
It doesn’t get much better than that.
And the story keeps growing.
A friend from my day job donated crayons—simple, thoughtful, necessary—so the children receiving these coloring books would have everything they need to bring the pages to life.
Piece by piece.
Person by person.
The story is moving forward.
And my role is becoming clearer.
All I need to do now… is complete the hand-off.
Not control it.
Not force it.
Just place it into the hands of others and trust where it goes next.
There’s a verse that feels fitting as I reflect on all of this:
“Each of you should use whatever gift you have received to serve others.” — 1 Peter 4:10
That’s what this feels like.
A gift, once held tightly…
Now being passed on.
Captain’s Addendum
Spock studied the situation carefully. “Captain, it appears the object you once carried has now become a shared experience among many.”
Bones smiled. “In plain English… it’s not yours anymore. And that’s a good thing.”
I nodded.
Because they’re right.
And maybe that’s the point.
Join me here:
https://substack.com/@michaelmulliganlivelong
Mission Log
Some stories begin with a single moment.
But the meaningful ones don’t end there.
They grow.
They move.
They find their way into the hands of others.
And when they do… they become something more than we ever imagined.
Thank you for being part of this journey.
🖖