The Man Who Needed Three Quiet Days Before He Could Decide

Oak Hollow has two reset cabins.

They are not meant to be identical.

Each one offers quiet, simplicity, and a way to step back from the ordinary pressure of life. But each hollow has its own feel, its own rhythm, and its own kind of shelter.

This story begins in the West Hollow Reset Cabin.

West Hollow is the more off-grid of the two — simple, quiet, private, and intentionally limited. The cabin does not offer the usual conveniences people expect from a vacation rental. That is part of the point.

No television.
No full kitchen inside the cabin.
No running water in the cabin.
No ordinary household noise.

Just a small place in the woods, a bed, a chair, a porch, a window, a wood stove, nearby access to the Hearth, and the walk back toward the Hub when the guest needs water, a shower, charging, food prep, or an indoor place to sit for a while.

For some people, that would not be enough.

For him, it was exactly why he came.

He Was Not in Crisis

He did not come to Oak Hollow because his life had fallen apart.

That would have been easier to explain.

A crisis has a language people understand. A hospital room. A death. A divorce. A job loss. A visible rupture. Something happened, and now the person needs time.

But that was not his story.

His life still looked ordinary from the outside.

He answered messages.
He went to work.
He paid bills.
He kept appointments.
He said yes when people asked for help.
He kept showing up.

That was part of the problem.

Nothing had broken loudly enough to give him permission to stop.

But something in him had grown tired of continuing without listening.

For months, he had been carrying a decision he could not quite name. It showed up in small ways. A tightness before opening his email. A heaviness on Sunday evening. A strange irritation when someone asked, “What do you want to do?” A habit of reaching for the phone whenever the room got quiet.

He did not need entertainment.

He did not need a better vacation.

He did not need another weekend filled with driving, eating out, checking messages, and returning home more tired than when he left.

He needed enough quiet to hear what he already knew.

That is why he came for three days.

The First Evening

The first evening did not feel dramatic.

He parked, carried in a small bag, and stood for a few minutes without doing anything.

The West Hollow cabin was simple.

That was the first thing he noticed.

Not decorative simple.

Actually simple.

There was a place to sleep.
A place to sit.
A window facing the trees.
A porch where he could step outside without needing a reason.
A wood stove for cold weather.
Enough shelter to feel held, but not enough convenience to fill the hours for him.

He had brought a notebook, a book, coffee, a few simple meals, and more clothes than he needed.

He had also brought the questions he had been trying not to ask.

For a while he stood near the window and listened.

At first, he heard almost nothing.

Then he heard what the ordinary noise of his life had been covering.

The trees moving.
A bird calling.
The small sounds of the cabin settling.
His own breathing.
His own uneasiness.

Quiet did not immediately make him peaceful.

It made him aware.

That surprised him.

He had imagined that stepping away would feel like relief. And it did, partly. But it also made him restless. His mind kept reaching for the familiar things: the phone, the calendar, the next task, the old argument, the unfinished obligation.

He wanted to check something.

He wanted to know what time it was.

He wanted to make a list.

He wanted to turn the quiet into another project.

Instead, he sat on the porch until the light began to fade.

For the first time in a long time, nothing required an immediate answer.

The Hub Matters

Before dark, he walked back toward the Hub.

That walk mattered more than he expected.

The Hub was not just a convenience building. It was part of what made the reset workable.

The cabin gave him quiet.

The Hub gave him support.

At the Hub, he could get water. He could shower. He could charge his phone if he needed to. He could prepare something simple to eat. He could sit indoors for a while, read, or step out of the weather.

That balance mattered.

The reset was not hardship.

It was not pretending to be a pioneer.

It was not a test of how much inconvenience a person could tolerate.

It was a simple cabin with intentional limits, supported by a shared place that made those limits possible.

He made a small meal without turning supper into an event. Nothing elaborate. Nothing that required a kitchen full of tools. Just enough.

Then he walked back toward West Hollow.

The sky had shifted. The trees were darker now. The cabin waited quietly.

He realized something before he reached the porch.

At home, every room seemed to ask something of him.

Here, the cabin did not ask him to perform.

It only asked him to be there.

The First Morning

The next morning, he woke earlier than expected.

There was no rush in the room.

That felt strange.

At home, mornings had become a kind of launch. Coffee, phone, weather, headlines, email, one task before the next task, the day gathering speed before he had even noticed himself inside it.

Here, the morning did not start without him.

He stepped outside.

The air was cool enough to make him pay attention.

He walked toward the Meadow without calling it exercise. There was no route to finish, no time to beat, no fitness goal to track. He simply walked.

The openness of the Meadow changed the feel of the morning.

The cabin had given him shelter.
The trees had given him quiet.
The Meadow gave him room.

At first his thoughts kept moving in their usual circles.

Should I stay where I am?
Should I change direction?
Am I too old to begin again?
Am I being selfish?
What would people think?
What if I make the wrong choice?
What if I already made it years ago and have been pretending not to know?

He had brought those questions with him.

But walking changed their volume.

They were still there, but they no longer filled the whole sky.

By the time he returned to the cabin, he had not solved anything. But he had noticed something important.

Most of his fear was not about the decision itself.

It was about disappointing the version of himself other people had come to expect.

That sentence stayed with him.

He wrote it down.

The Second Day

The second day was quieter.

Not because his mind had gone silent.

It had not.

But something in him had stopped trying to force the stay to produce an answer.

He walked to the Hub again for water and a shower.

He prepared something simple.

He charged his phone, then turned it back off.

He sat for a while in the indoor quiet before returning to West Hollow.

That rhythm began to matter.

Cabin.
Porch.
Meadow.
Hub.
Notebook.
Simple meal.
Sleep.
Walking again.

Nothing about it was complicated.

That was the gift.

The fewer decisions the place asked of him, the more clearly he could hear the decision he had brought with him.

In the afternoon, he opened the notebook again.

This time he did not write a list of pros and cons.

Lists had been part of the problem. They made the decision seem like arithmetic. They let him pretend the answer would appear if he could only arrange the columns correctly.

Instead, he wrote one question at the top of the page:

What am I afraid would happen if I told the truth?

That question did not feel efficient.

It felt honest.

For several minutes, he wrote nothing.

Then the answers came slowly.

People might think I failed.
Someone might be disappointed.
I might lose the identity I have used for years.
I might not know who I am without the old role.
I might have to admit I stayed too long.
I might have to begin smaller than I wanted.

He read the list twice.

None of it surprised him.

That was how he knew it mattered.

The quiet had not given him new information. It had given him enough room to stop avoiding the information he already had.

The Third Morning

By the third morning, he still had not made a public decision.

He had not sent the email.
He had not announced a plan.
He had not explained anything to anyone.

But something had shifted.

The decision no longer felt like a storm he had to survive.

It felt like a truth he could approach.

He sat on the porch with his coffee and watched the light come through the trees.

He realized he had been asking the wrong question.

He had been asking, “What decision will make everyone comfortable?”

That question had no honest answer.

A better question had arrived slowly:

“What decision allows me to live without pretending?”

That was not a simple question.

It did not make the next step easy.

But it made the next step clearer.

And clarity was enough for now.

He packed slowly. He cleaned up behind himself. He stood for a moment at the door before leaving.

Nothing dramatic had happened.

No lightning bolt.
No grand revelation.
No perfect plan.

But he was leaving with one sentence he trusted more than all the noise he had brought with him:

I do not have to decide from inside the pressure.

That was the gift of three quiet days.


Why a Reset Helps

A reset does not make decisions for you.

It does not fix a life from the outside.

It does not remove responsibility, grief, uncertainty, or consequence.

But it can do something ordinary life often does not allow.

It can give you room.

Room to stop performing.
Room to notice what you are carrying.
Room to hear the question beneath the question.
Room to distinguish fear from truth.
Room to let the mind settle before asking it to choose.

Sometimes people do not need more advice.

Sometimes they do not need more information.

Sometimes they need distance from the pressure long enough to remember what honesty sounds like.

Oak Hollow is being shaped for that kind of pause.

Two reset cabins.
Two hollows.
One purpose.

Not escape.

Not entertainment.

Not a busy getaway dressed up as rest.

A reset.

A small, quiet place where a person can step away from the usual noise and listen for the next honest step.

Three days may not solve everything.

But sometimes three quiet days are enough to begin telling the truth.


Continue with Oak Hollow Cabins

Oak Hollow Cabins offers one-person reset stays near Boaz, Alabama.

The West Hollow Reset Cabin and East Hollow Reset Cabin are each shaped for quiet, simplicity, and a deliberate pause from ordinary demands.

A reset may be a long weekend, a week, or a longer stay.

The point is not to disappear from life.

The point is to return to it with more clarity.


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Author: Richard L. Fricks

Richard L. Fricks is a novelist, former attorney and CPA, Fictionary Certified StoryCoach Editor, and creator of The Pencil-Driven Life. He lives in rural North Alabama near Boaz, where much of his fiction and reflection remain rooted. His work explores story, inherited purpose, faith and doubt, family pressure, moral contradiction, consciousness, ordinary life, and the practice of beginning again with a pencil.

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