<p>For a long time, I thought that progress depended on inspiration.</p><p>If only I felt more motivated. If only I had more energy. If only I could find a few uninterrupted days to focus on the things that matter most.</p><p>But the older I get, the more I discover that meaningful work is rarely built on inspiration alone. It's built on small routines, simple habits, and the willingness to take the next step even when you don't feel like it.</p><p>In this week's episode of my podcast 'The Walk', I reflect on that lesson while preparing a new batch of podcasts, working on a book about the saints of the Camino, and getting ready to finally rewrite the fantasy novel I've been developing since last year. Along the way, I share some of the practical tricks that help me deal with overwhelm, procrastination, clutter, and the endless stream of creative ideas that compete for attention. Not because I've mastered any of these things, but because I'm still learning them myself.</p><p>The surprising discovery is that the same principles seem to work everywhere. Writing a novel. Cleaning a kitchen. Reading more books. Building a healthier life. In every case, success rarely comes from giant leaps. It comes from creating a little space, taking one small action, and trusting that momentum will follow.</p><p>Often all you need to do is to take the next step.</p> <br/><br/>Get full access to Father Roderick at <a href="https://fatherroderick.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4">fatherroderick.substack.com/subscribe</a>