These videos aren’t an explanation of Parkinson's—but an experience. The camera often sits close, moving with each step, each breath. The rhythm is uneven: footsteps on pavement, a pause too long at a curb, a hand lingering on a railing. The world continues at its usual pace, but the body negotiates with it—quietly, constantly.
There is no narrator in the traditional sense. Instead, fragments of a story emerge. You hear the creative process as much as the product: a sudden moment of clarity that feels earned rather than given.
Walking, exercising, and conversing become the act of writing Book 2 of the Spilled Coffee series. A bench becomes a place to write a chapter. A stretch between trees becomes a sentence searching for its ending. The act of moving forward—physically and creatively—mirrors Parkinson's disease. There are hesitations. Restarts. Small triumphs that might go unnoticed unless you’re paying attention.
The sound carries as much weight as the visuals: the scrape of a shoe, the faint tremor in the voice, ambient life continuing just out of sync.
What the videos offer is not information about Parkinson’s, but proximity to it—the texture of it. And alongside that, the persistence of the creative impulse.
The videos share aspects of Parkinson's that are beyond shaking hands - experiential. The chapters in these videos are the raw spoken drafts, unfiltered, and shared without edits.

