Fred Aiken Writing

Tag: dailyprompt

call it a day

Daily writing prompt
What are your daily habits?

My morning starts with the ritual of reading. There’s something about the stillness of early hours that makes words somewhat meditative. Whether it’s the latest novel I’m engrossed in or an article on economic trends, this time sets the tone for my day. Then, it’s off to work, where the first order of business is plotting out a strategy for any potential futures trades. It’s like a game of high-stakes chess with the market, requiring foresight and precision.

Roasting coffee is more than just a task; it’s a passion. The scent of beans turning from green to brown is both grounding and invigorating. When I’m not roasting, I read. It’s my fallback activity, a constant companion that fills the gaps between tasks. Occasionally, I manage to write—notes, ideas, or sometimes, just thoughts—if I’m not too distracted by the endless stream of information that modern life brings.

Lunchtime is a chess match with a side of food. The mental exercise is as satisfying as the meal, providing a refreshing break from work. My afternoons include a walk with my wife, a time to reconnect and unwind, even if just for a few minutes. It’s a small but significant part of my routine.

After work, the drive home is a transition period, a bridge between the structured demands of my job and the freedom of my personal time. Evenings are varied; I might dive into a video game, immersing myself in a virtual world, or sew if I have an Etsy order to fulfill. There’s a meditative quality to sewing, the repetitive motion of needle and thread creating something tangible and unique.

Stretching is my way of signaling the end of the day. It’s a practice that keeps my body flexible and my mind calm, a final act of self-care before sleep. And then, with the day’s activities behind me, I fall asleep, ready to start the cycle anew.

There’s obviously some variations to my day-to-day, but for the most part, it follows the above schedule. Though it’s not entirely inclusive of everything I do habitually. There’s the boring bodily maintenance routines that I imagine most everyone does, like brushing my teeth, showering, shaving, and washing my hands, etc., though not always in that order, and some of them I do throughout the day.

These habits, mundane as they might seem, provide structure and a sense of purpose. They are the threads that weave the fabric of my days, creating a pattern that is uniquely mine. While there are always variations—unexpected tasks, spontaneous outings, the occasional deviation from the norm—these routines anchor me, offering a semblance of order in an often chaotic world.

fashion adjacent

Daily writing prompt
If you were forced to wear one outfit over and over again, what would it be?

If I were to be forced to wear a particular outfit every day, it would probably be a t-shirt and gym shorts. That’s what I normally wear all the time anyway. I’m not a big fashion person. I don’t buy name brands, and my fashion choices revolve around what I find most comfortable. Because I wear a t-shirt and gym shorts to work and on weekends, I would hope that if I had to wear a specific ensemble, it would be that one.

But then again, if I were forced to wear something, it might imply that it wouldn’t be by choice, which suggests it might be an outfit I wouldn’t normally wear. Being forced suggests a lack of choice, so if I had to wear an ensemble, it might be the polar opposite of a t-shirt and gym shorts. So…a suit? Probably a suit.

There was a time in my life when I worked in retail management, and I wore a suit day in and day out. It was one of the most miserable periods of my life. Not entirely because of the suits I wore, but they certainly didn’t help. I don’t have a personality suited for management and dealing with people in general, but retail was the only industry hiring at the time, so somehow, an antisocial twentysomething ended up with a retail management job.

That job felt like being forced into everything, including what I wore. I would occasionally switch it up by wearing colorful bow ties as a way to express myself, but it was still a suit, and a suit is a suit.

I’m incredibly hot-natured, which is why I wear shorts and a t-shirt nowadays. Also, living in the deep south, where the humidity is unbearable, made suits incredibly uncomfortable for me. Although, I doubt changing the weather would have made much difference. I’m sure if you put me in Seattle and told me to wear a suit, I’d still complain about it.

I tend to also really dislike the price of most clothing. I don’t like spending more than $5 on a shirt and around $3 for shorts. And as you can imagine, most suits do not fit that budget. I don’t want to think about how many hundreds of dollars I spent on suits while I was a manager. And while I wasn’t spending thousands like some people in business and business adjacent fields (aka Wall Streeties), it was definitely more than I wanted to spend.

I feel vastly more comfortable at a thrift store, getting my entire ensemble for less than a movie ticket nowadays. This is primarily because I’m incredibly hard on my clothes. No matter what brand I buy, I will always get a hole or wear it down quite a bit. So I figure, why would I spend top dollar if the clothes are going to end up in the same condition within a couple of weeks?

In the end, fashion is about comfort for me. T-shirts and gym shorts are my go-to because they allow me to be myself, free from the constraints of stiff, formal clothing. Maybe it’s an act of rebellion against those days in retail, or maybe it’s just about finding peace in simplicity. Either way, given the choice—or even without it—I’d stick with my usual attire.

The Broken Radio Oracle

Daily writing prompt
How important is spirituality in your life?

It started with the radios. At least, that’s how I like to remember it, because beginnings are important, even in a world where causality is just a quaint suggestion. It was a Tuesday, or maybe a Thursday—it was definitely raining—and the static crackle of old AM radios began whispering secrets to me. You could call it a spiritual awakening, or just another misfire in the symphony of neural dissonance. I choose to call it Tuesday, as I imagine most people would, and I would consider myself very much to be, well, like most people.

The first message came from an antique Philco 90 I found in a thrift store. It was buried under a pile of dusty National Geographics, all smelling of mildew and forgotten plans to travel the world. I plugged it in out of sheer boredom, tuning it to a frequency that shouldn’t have existed. The voice was faint but insistent, a ghostly echo in the cacophony of my cluttered apartment.

“Do you seek enlightenment or escape?” it asked. The voice was neither male nor female, human nor machine. It was an existential hum, vibrating through the very bones of the universe.

“Both,” I replied, because who doesn’t? The Philco crackled approvingly, and I felt a shift in the air, like the world had nudged a little closer to an unseen truth.

From that day on, I became the reluctant disciple of broken radios. Each day, I scoured flea markets, garage sales, and abandoned buildings for my next oracle. I never knew where the messages would come from—a Zenith Trans-Oceanic, a Sony ICF, a Sangean PR-D5—but they always came, whispering fragments of wisdom, riddles wrapped in static.

“Spirituality is the art of losing yourself to find yourself,” one said. This came from a 1960s transistor radio, its once-bright plastic now faded and cracked.

“Faith is believing in the absence of reason,” intoned another, a voice that buzzed from a battered Grundig Satellit 2100.

People started to notice. My apartment, once a haven of organized chaos, became a shrine to these enigmatic devices. Friends, or what passed for them, would come by out of morbid curiosity. They’d ask if I’d gone mad, if I’d finally succumbed to the pressures of a reality that never quite fit. I’d just smile, knowing that they couldn’t hear the music in the static, the poetry in the noise.

“How important is spirituality in your life?” the radios would ask me. And each time, my answer changed.

“Today, it’s a whisper in the dark,” I’d say to a Motorola Golden Voice, its speakers rattling with ancient wisdom.

“Tomorrow, it’s the silence between thoughts,” I’d muse to a Panasonic RF-2200, the dials spinning like a roulette wheel of fate.

The voices never demanded worship, never promised salvation. They were guides, not gods, leading me through the labyrinth of my own mind. And in the process, I began to understand that spirituality wasn’t about rituals or dogmas. It was about connection—the kind that bridges the gap between the known and the unknown, the tangible and the ethereal.

One day, while rummaging through an old warehouse, I found an RCA Victor Special Model 50X. It was pristine, as if time had forgotten it. I took it home, heart pounding with the anticipation of a gambler placing his final bet. Plugging it in, I tuned to that impossible frequency, waiting for the familiar crackle.

“Are you ready?” it asked, and I knew this was no ordinary message.

“Ready for what?” I whispered, afraid of the answer.

“For the next step,” the radio replied, its voice softer, almost tender. “You’ve walked the path of the seeker. Now, it’s time to become the source.”

The static faded, leaving a profound silence in its wake. I looked around my apartment, at the rows of radios that had been my teachers, my companions. I understood, then, that the journey wasn’t about finding answers, but about becoming a question, an endless exploration of the self and the universe.

I unplugged the RCA Victor, and as I did, the other radios fell silent, one by one. They had taught me all they could. The rest was up to me.

Now, I wander the streets with a new purpose. I speak to strangers, not in the cryptic tones of the radios, but in simple, human words. I share the fragments of wisdom I’ve gathered, not as a prophet, but as a fellow traveler. And in their eyes, I see the same spark of curiosity, the same hunger for connection.

Spirituality, I’ve learned, is the dance between the signal and the noise, the interplay of presence and absence. It’s the art of tuning in, of listening to the spaces between the static. And as I walk this path, I carry the voices of a thousand broken radios within me, each one a note in the symphony playing out. Yet still on the verge of being unplugged.