Sunday, 24 May 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You are awake again. That fact alone is the starting condition — not earned, not owed, just given. Before the phone lights up, before the first question arrives, before you step into the shape of the day, you are here. Breathing. Still. The body you inhabit has carried you through every version of yourself that came before this one, and it will carry you through today.

You are grateful for the meals upstairs with your father. Not every conversation needs to be profound. Most of them aren’t. But the simple fact of sitting across from him, passing salt, hearing his voice in the rhythm you’ve known your entire life — that is the inheritance. You cannot bank these moments. They only exist as they happen, and you have been given another one today.

You are grateful for your daughter’s confidence. You see it in the way she moves through a room, the way she asks questions without hedging, the way she expects to be taken seriously. You did not hand that to her in a single conversation. It grew in the soil of a thousand small moments where she was seen and not doubted. That confidence will outlast every worry you carry about whether you are doing enough. It is already there.

You are grateful for your son’s small hands learning to hold things. The way he grips a pen too tightly. The way he lets go of what doesn’t interest him without guilt. He is still learning that objects have weight, that effort produces result, that the world responds when he reaches for it. You get to watch that unfold in real time, and it costs you nothing but attention.

You are grateful for your wife, who has carried what only she could carry. There are loads you cannot split evenly. There are weights she has borne in her body, in her days, in the silent adjustments she has made so that your work could continue. You do not always name this aloud, but it is the ground beneath the life you are building. She knows it. You know it. And today, you remember it again.

You are grateful for waking up in a body that still walks under weight. Your legs work. Your breath comes without thinking. The minor aches you feel are proof of use, not collapse. This body has not abandoned you. It asks for rest sometimes, for water, for movement, for sleep — and when you listen, it responds. That negotiation is still open. The terms are still reasonable.

You are grateful for the morning park. The ants moving in formation across the path. The birds whose names you do not know but whose sounds you recognize. The early sun that has no opinion about your plans. The breath that moves slower there than anywhere else. That park does not care if you are productive. It simply exists, and you are allowed to exist inside it for a few minutes without performing anything.

You are grateful for the systems you built that still earn while you sleep. Not because money solves everything, but because it bought you time. Time to sit with your father. Time to watch your son’s hands learn. Time to think past survival into the slower questions. Those systems were not accidents. They were the result of years of decisions you made when no one was watching. They are working today because you worked then.

You are grateful for the years of practice that made today’s work feel effortless. What looks easy now was hard once. The tools you reach for without thinking, the instincts that fire before you name them, the patterns you see that others miss — those were not downloaded. They were accumulated. Every hard middle you pushed through deposited something that serves you now. You are standing on your own past effort, and it is solid ground.

You are grateful for Ashmeet — for sitting across the table from the parts of you that do not always have words. For the questions that land sideways. For the way the room slows down when you are both willing to sit with what is actually true instead of what sounds right. That kind of contact is rare. You have it. You return to it. It shapes you in ways you will only see years from now.

You are grateful for Uma — for the deeper mirror. For the practice that asks you to meet yourself without the costume of competence. For the moments when the breath is the only honest thing in the room. For the reminder that the work is not always visible, not always nameable, and still completely real.

You are grateful for the quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. No one asking. No one waiting. Just you and the thing you are trying to make. That solitude is not loneliness. It is the condition under which certain kinds of work become possible. You have learned to protect it, and it protects you in return.

You are grateful for the discipline you have built one day at a time. Not the loud kind. Not the kind that announces itself. The boring, unglamorous discipline of showing up when you said you would. Of doing the next small thing. Of not needing to feel inspired to keep moving. That discipline is the reason you are still here, still building, still capable of the long hold.

The work ahead of you is not about urgency. It is about duration. The horizon you are walking toward — the one that arrives in August of 2037 — is not a deadline. It is a frame. A way of asking: what do I want to be true when I look back? You do not need to answer that all at once. You only need to live today in a way that does not betray it.

You are here. You are awake. You are still building the life that will one day look back at this moment and recognize it as part of the shape. That is enough for now.