Kayla Series — Episode 2 – First Night, First Silence

The Kayla Series is a year-long, weekly narrative following the imagined first tenant of Oak Hollow Cabins’ Threshold Cabin. Each episode explores what happens when life is intentionally simplified and lived more slowly.

If this is your first visit, you may want to begin with the Introduction or Episode 1.

Kayla hadn’t expected the space to feel so different after the sun went down. The cabin was the same one-room shelter it had been that afternoon, with the same cedar smell rising from the freshly cut boards, the same pale light slipping across the floor. But after dark, everything sharpened. The air cooled. The silence deepened. Even her own breath sounded louder than it should have.

She placed her last box on the built-in table and stepped outside onto the small porch, looking into the thickening blue of evening. The forest around her felt like a single breathing thing, inhaling and exhaling in slow, deep rhythms that didn’t include her yet. Far away, one dog barked again — maybe the same one she’d heard earlier. Then it went quiet. A kind of quiet she hadn’t known in years.

She stood there for a moment, hands tucked into the pockets of her jacket, listening for something familiar. A car somewhere. A TV from a neighbor’s apartment. Even the dull hum of the refrigerator back home. But here there was none of that, not after she switched off the generator. The owners had explained how it worked, how she’d have to run it when she needed power and let it rest otherwise. It wasn’t hard — just different.

The part she hadn’t expected was the silence that followed.

It wasn’t empty. It wasn’t hollow. It was… complete. Like the world had stopped insisting on anything at all.

She went back inside. The lantern she’d bought for this year-long experiment waited on the small shelf near the door — a simple metal one with a warm LED glow meant to imitate a flame. She lifted it, clicked it on, and the cabin filled with a soft, amber light that reached the corners but didn’t erase the shadows. It made the space feel intentional, not improvised.

She sat on the edge of her bed and pulled the blanket around her shoulders. The mattress was a cheap one she’d ordered online, still puffed from expanding earlier that afternoon. It wasn’t luxury, but it felt solid and clean, like a beginning.

Her phone buzzed on the table — a notification, probably from a group chat she hadn’t had the courage to leave. For a moment she reached toward it, then stopped. The whole point of coming here was to break the reflexes she had leaned on for too long. The constant checking, the scrolling, the way she filled every spare second with noise. She clicked the phone to silent and placed it face down. It felt like a small victory, though she wasn’t sure who she was winning against.

She lay back and stared at the ceiling, the lantern casting low patterns across the boards. Something about the silence made her more aware of herself. Not in a self-conscious way, but in a way that felt strangely honest… and vulnerable. Without sound to cover her thoughts, they came in clearer, cleaner, like water after a storm settles.

Was she running away? She had asked herself that question more than once during the drive here. Maybe she was. But she was also running toward something she couldn’t yet name, something she hoped lived somewhere beyond the noise, beyond the expectations, beyond the internal pressure she’d carried so long she’d forgotten it was pressure at all.

She turned onto her side. Through the window she could see the outline of the Hearth in the moonlight, just a faint shape against the darker tree line. She imagined making that walk early in the morning — lantern in hand, breath rising in small clouds, the world not awake yet. A ritual built not from convenience, but presence.

Her stomach tightened with a mix of nerves and anticipation. She liked that the Hearth wasn’t attached to the cabin. That it required movement, required intention. Back in town everything had been too easy, too close. Ten steps from bed to bathroom. Two taps from distraction to distraction. A life engineered to avoid friction, and somehow that had only made her more tired.

A moth bumped against the window screen, wings brushing with a tiny whisper. She sat up and opened her journal, the one she’d packed last because she still wasn’t sure she’d have the courage to use it. She wrote a single line at the top of the page:

I didn’t realize how loud my life was until it stopped.

She capped the pen and closed the book. The lantern glowed softly beside her. Outside, the wind moved through the tall grasses like a quiet river. She pulled the blanket tighter and lay back down, letting the stillness settle into her chest.

Eventually she clicked off the lantern.

The darkness was immediate. Total. Not the softedges darkness she knew from years of living near streetlights, but an older kind, the kind that existed long before electricity softened the world. She could not see her hand when she held it up. She could only feel her own breath — slow, warm, steady.

For the first time in a long time, she wasn’t afraid of the dark. She wasn’t even uncomfortable. She felt held by it, like it expected nothing and demanded nothing. The quiet wasn’t empty anymore. It was full — of what, she wasn’t sure, but it felt like something true.

She closed her eyes.

Morning would come, and with it the first walk to the Hearth, the first real cold on her skin, the first instance of choosing intention over habit. But for now, in the absolute stillness, she allowed herself to rest.

The silence wasn’t absence.

It was invitation.

And she was finally ready to listen.

Kayla Series — Episode 1 – The Arrival

Kayla missed the turn the first time. The gravel entrance appeared just after a bend in the county road, half-hidden behind a cedar tree and a crooked mailbox that didn’t seem eager to announce anything. She drove past, slowed, and stopped on the shoulder, watching dust drift in the mirror before easing into reverse and turning in.

The gravel sounded different under her tires than any street back in town—deeper and more hollow, as if it wasn’t just lying on the ground but resting on something alive. Golden-hour light flickered through the trees, catching the small wooden sign that came into view after a gentle rise: OAK HOLLOW CABINS. Beneath it, a smaller hand-painted plank read: Simplify on Purpose.

She paused longer than necessary before continuing along the winding drive. Her chest felt tight, but not from anxiety exactly—more like anticipation pressed up against uncertainty. The path split ahead, one way toward West Hollow, the other marked for long-term guests of East Hollow. She followed the arrow that didn’t try very hard to persuade her one way or another.

The Threshold cabin revealed itself slowly through the trees—first the metal roof, then the charcoal siding, and finally the small deck with its simple pine door and black strap hinges. Just beyond it stood the Hearth, freshly built, the pine siding still glowing with its first coat of oil. It looked both brand new and strangely seasoned, like something that had always belonged here.

Kayla parked beside a cleared patch of ground and turned off the engine. Silence pressed gently into the space where road noise had been. It wasn’t total silence—she could hear birds somewhere high above, the soft movement of wind in branches, and far off, a single dog bark—but compared to the constant hum of town life, this felt like the world had switched to a slower frequency.

She stayed in the driver’s seat for a moment with her hands still resting on the wheel. She’d told people different versions of the truth about why she came here, each tailored to the listener: “a year to reset,” “a chance to simplify,” “a private faith retreat,” “a break from noise.” All true, but none complete.

She finally opened her door and stepped out, the gravel shifting under her flats. At the back of the SUV were the three boxes she’d packed last, labeled in black permanent marker: KITCHEN, CLOTHES, BOOKS + JOURNAL. She chose the heaviest first. It felt appropriate.

The walk to the cabin door was short but uneven enough to require careful steps. She tried the key, and the latch turned smoothly, the hinges creaking softly—not old, just honest. She stepped inside and set the box down near the wall.

Light filtered in through the windows differently than the filtered, conditioned daylight of her rented duplex. The air smelled of wood, possibility, and something like honesty. Bare studs framed the interior, a reminder that this life would not be handed to her finished.

The box at her feet seemed to stare up at her. She touched the lid with one hand, then walked back out onto the small deck and looked toward the Hearth. The sunlight caught the grain of the north wall, warming it until it almost glowed. She imagined walking to it in early dawn with breath fogging the cold air, lantern in hand, because here even the most basic routines would require presence.

Back home, ten steps and a switch had separated her bed from running water. Here, each necessity would demand intention. Something about that felt like relief.

A pickup arrived minutes later, tires rumbling over the gravel. She turned to see one of the Oak Hollow owners climb out, the man whose name she recalled from an email, moving with the unhurried ease of someone not performing hospitality, just practicing it.

“Kayla?” he said.

“Yes,” she answered, suddenly aware of how long it had been since she’d felt new somewhere.

“You found it alright?”

“I missed the turn once.” She smiled a little. “Your sign is subtle.”

He glanced toward it and shrugged lightly. “We figured the right ones would find it.”

He helped her carry in her things, making easy conversation—generator basics, where the Watering Place was located, how the Hearth worked, what improvements were coming. Nothing oversold. Nothing sermonized. Just useful orientation offered with the tone of someone handing over a key rather than a pitch.

When everything was inside, he paused at the doorway. “Take your time settling in. Most people don’t figure out how to live here their first day.”

Kayla nodded, unsure of a response but grateful for one that didn’t expect anything. When the truck drove away, the quiet returned, but now it felt like something was listening rather than waiting.

She stood just inside the cabin doorway, arms crossed, breathing slower than she remembered breathing in weeks. Her eyes drifted again to the Hearth—the small building that would require her to walk across the concrete pad morning and night, no matter the weather, no matter her state of mind.

The thought of inconvenience did not bother her. It calmed her.

Maybe that was why she came—to shed the illusion that comfort and meaning were the same thing.

She stepped back outside and leaned against the doorway, letting the light fall across her face. The trees behind the Hearth swayed like they were saying something she wasn’t quite tuned to yet.

For the first time in months, she didn’t hurry to interpret the moment.

Maybe the point was not to understand it.

Maybe the point was to be in it.

She looked at the Hearth again and imagined the path she would take in the early mornings—the cool air, the lantern light, the quiet. A different kind of ritual, not made of convenience but attention.

She didn’t smile, but her shoulders loosened and her eyes softened as if something unclenched inside her, not completely, but enough to breathe without effort.

She wasn’t sure if this place would heal her or undo her, but for the first time in a long time, both options seemed honest.

And honesty felt like the right beginning.


If Kayla’s journey speaks to something stirring in you, I hope you’ll walk with her from week to week. You can follow each installment here on Simplify on Purpose — and if you’d like these stories delivered automatically, you’re invited to subscribe and come along for the full year.

Introduction to the Kayla Series

Why We’re Telling This Story

Every person who comes to Oak Hollow is looking for something. Sometimes they know what it is. Often, they don’t — not at first.

Life moves fast, decisions stack up, expectations accumulate, and somewhere along the way many of us realize we’ve built a life that works on paper… but feels slightly out of tune with the quiet voice inside.

At Oak Hollow, we invite people to pause, to simplify on purpose, and to discover what becomes visible when noise, convenience, and autopilot are no longer in charge.

The Kayla Series is a year-long narrative following an imagined first tenant of our Threshold Cabin — a woman who chooses to step away from convenience-driven living and into a smaller, slower, more intentional way of inhabiting the world. Though fictional, Kayla’s story is built from real motivations, real doubts, and real longings that many people quietly carry.

This is not a novel, not a self-help manual, and not a sermon. It’s a story for reflection — published weekly — with the hope that somewhere inside Kayla’s questions, you may hear echoes of your own.

What to Expect

  • A new installment every week for one year
  • Approximately 1,000 words per episode
  • Told from Kayla’s perspective as she learns to live differently
  • No drama for drama’s sake, no sensationalism
  • Honest emotion, ordinary details, simple moments
  • Growth that comes slowly, quietly, and truthfully

There are no villains in this story. No one is here to be shamed, rescued, or converted.

Kayla is not chasing a version of success — she is learning how to live a version of herself.

Why It Matters

Because stillness is not passive. Simplicity is not a downgrade. And sometimes, the most important transformations happen a step outside the life that was expected.

You are invited to walk with her.

Welcome to The Kayla Series — Week 1.


If Kayla’s journey speaks to something stirring in you, I hope you’ll walk with her from week to week. You can follow each installment here on Simplify on Purpose — and if you’d like these stories delivered automatically, you’re invited to subscribe and come along for the full year.

The Hearth at Threshold Cabin: Building Simplicity Into a Daily Ritual

An ongoing Oak Hollow series — Part 1

Walking across the concrete pad behind the Threshold Cabin early this morning, I realized again why the Hearth matters. It isn’t just a small outbuilding we’re constructing. It’s not “the bathroom,” or “the outhouse,” or even “the composting room.” It is something quieter and more intentional than that.

It’s a place where a person steps out of her cabin and into a slower rhythm of living. A place built on purpose — not convenience, not speed, not habit.

It is, at its core, a daily ritual of simplicity.


Why Build a Hearth at All?

Most modern tiny homes tuck everything under one roof: a kitchenette, a bathroom, electrical wiring, plumbing, hot water, humidity control — all those things that make a building complicated and expensive.

Oak Hollow is about a different way of living.

Threshold Cabin — the first long-term rental in East Hollow — is deliberately simple, and the Hearth is a major part of that simplicity. Instead of squeezing a bathroom into a 12×16 structure, we chose to separate it completely:

  • A 4×6 structure
  • Steps away from the cabin’s northeast corner
  • Fully off-grid
  • No plumbing
  • No electricity
  • No septic system
  • No noise

Just a composting toilet, a hand-washing station, a shelf, and room to breathe.

We’re building something functional, yes — but also something deeply human.


This Week’s Progress

The Deck and Framing

Yesterday, Jonathan and I built the 4×6 deck floor using 4×4 posts, 2×4 framing, and 5/4 decking boards. That tiny platform already gives the structure a sense of presence, as though it knows what it’s going to become.

What we’ve decided for the Threshold Hearth is this:

The interior will be one unified 4×6 room, not divided into a 4×4 toilet area and a separate 2×4 firewood side as originally planned.

The full interior becomes the tenant’s private space — roomy enough for a composting toilet on the north wall (left side in photo) and a simple vanity shelf on the east wall (right rear in photo).

Firewood storage will be moved outside under an extended roof on the east or south side. This gives the tenant maximum comfort inside the Hearth.


Inside the Hearth: A Different Kind of Bathroom

Composting Toilet

Along the north wall (41 inches inside stud-to-stud), we’re installing a handcrafted composting toilet box built from plywood and 2×4 framing. It holds a standard 5-gallon bucket lined with compostable or heavy-duty bags. Next to it — built into the same box — is a smaller compartment filled with:

  • Pine shavings
  • Cedar shavings
  • Or peat moss

This is used as cover material after each use.

Simple. Clean. Odor-free.

No plumbing, no flushing, no wastewater — just a low-tech solution that reflects how our grandparents lived.


A Return to Hand-Washing Rituals

On the east wall will sit a small vanity shelf. Instead of plumbing, we’re using an old-time basin and pitcher:

  • Fill the pitcher from The Watering Place (less than 100 feet away)
  • Pour into the basin
  • Wash face and hands
  • Pour greywater into a dedicated bucket beneath the shelf

It’s slower. It’s intentional.

It brings a sense of meaning to a task most people rush through.

And because this is Oak Hollow, we’ve kept the option open:

A simple bottle of hand sanitizer sits on the shelf as well — because sometimes practicality deserves a seat at the table.


Light From Above

One of the quiet joys of the Hearth will be the natural light. We plan to use a clear or lightly frosted polycarbonate roof panel over the vanity area to illuminate the interior during daylight hours.

It transforms the space:

  • No artificial lights
  • A soft glow over the basin
  • A sense of calm and openness
  • And zero compromise to privacy

This isn’t just a utility building — it’s a small sanctuary.


What This Means for the Tenant

When our first East Hollow tenant walks out of her cabin each morning — maybe a young professional woman working in town, or someone seeking stillness and a break from modern noise — she’ll find:

  • A clean, private composting toilet
  • A quiet space to wash up
  • Daylight filtering through the roof
  • Fresh air
  • The smell of pine
  • A sense of peace that comes from stepping outside, even briefly

The Hearth becomes part of her daily rhythm.

A grounding practice.

A reminder that life can be lived differently — slowly, simply, intentionally.


What’s Next?

Over the coming days, we’ll continue:

  • Building the walls
  • Installing the composting toilet box
  • Adding the vanity shelf and mirror
  • Framing the extended roof for firewood storage
  • Installing the clear roofing panel
  • Finishing the interior

And we’ll document it all here in this ongoing series.

Because building Oak Hollow isn’t just about construction.

It’s about meaning — and creating spaces where people rediscover what it feels like to live without hurry.

Stay tuned for Part 2.

The Threshold Cabin as viewed from the under-construction Watering Place.

Shaping the Land, Naming the Hollows

It’s been a while since our last update — not because we’ve stopped building, but because we’ve been listening. To the land. To the rhythm of work. To the sound of what Oak Hollow is slowly becoming.

Over the past few weeks, we’ve been shaping not just cabins and paths, but identity. The property has naturally divided itself into three unique spaces — what we now call the Hollows.

  • East Hollow has become our long-term community — quiet lots where people will build or lease their own off-grid cabins and stay for months or years.
  • West Hollow will host short-term retreats — places to rest, reflect, and reset for a few days before stepping back into the world.
  • South Hollow, the newest addition, offers something even simpler: primitive camping. Just a fire ring, a tent clearing, and the hush of the forest.

Each Hollow holds its own kind of stillness, and together they form a living map of what we value most — simplicity, self-reliance, and time.

While we haven’t opened yet, there’s quiet progress everywhere: Cabin 1’s finishing touches, plans for The Hub’s interior layout, and trail work leading toward the future campsites in South Hollow. Every decision — from where to place a window to how far a trail should curve — is guided by the same question that started all of this:
What if life could be simpler again?

📷 (Include the new South Hollow dawn image here — full-width, centered.)


🧭 Why It Matters

Oak Hollow was never about building faster; it’s about building truer.
Each Hollow represents a different way of living slowly — from full-time off-grid homes to weekend retreats to nights under the stars.

We’re shaping more than land; we’re shaping a rhythm of life that feels human again.


📬 Stay Connected

If you’ve been following our story, thank you. Your encouragement means more than you know.
To receive each new post as Oak Hollow unfolds, subscribe to Simplify on Purpose — no noise, no ads, just the real story of a place being built one quiet decision at a time.