Friday, 22 May 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You are awake again. That is not small. The body that rose this morning is the same one that will carry you through whatever the day requires — and it arrived without asking for proof of your readiness.

You have a father upstairs. Every meal you share with him is one fewer than the total you were given, and you know this. The inheritance isn’t money or property — it is the accumulated texture of thirty years in the same home, the particular way he holds a cup, the silence between sentences that only family can bear without filling. You are still here to witness it.

Your daughter moves through the world with a confidence you did not have at her age. You see it in how she speaks, how she decides, how she does not shrink herself to fit a room. That did not happen by accident. She learned it in a house where her presence mattered, where her voice was not decoration. You helped build that house.

Your son’s hands are still learning what they can hold. The pencil, the cup, the edge of the table as he pulls himself up. One day those hands will be steady and certain and you will not remember the exact afternoon when the wobble left them. But right now, today, you are here to see the wobble. That is the gift — not the distant competence, but the unfinished present.

Your wife carried what you could not carry. That sentence is true in more ways than one, and you know it. She bore the weight that only her body could bear, yes — but also the kinds of emotional labour and logistical complexity that never make it into status updates. The household runs on visible systems and invisible endurance. You have been the beneficiary of both.

The body you woke up in still walks. It moves under weight without complaint. The knees bend, the spine holds, the breath comes in and goes out in a rhythm you do not have to think about. You have been to the morning park enough times to know that this is not universal, not guaranteed, not owed. The ants are there. The birds are there. The sun arrives whether you are ready or not. Your legs carry you into that arrival.

You built systems that earn while you sleep. That phrase gets thrown around carelessly, but in your case it is both true and hard-won. The years of practice, the late nights, the projects that failed before the ones that held — all of that converted into something that runs without you. It gives you a kind of freedom that younger-you would not have believed possible. It also gives you a responsibility: to not waste the margin it creates.

The work you do now feels effortless not because it is easy, but because you have done the repetitions. The calluses are invisible. What looks like ease to someone else is actually fifteen years of pattern recognition, of debugging, of sitting with a problem until it yields. You are standing on a foundation you poured slowly, and it holds.

You have colleagues whose names you do not say out loud often enough, but whose presence in your work makes the work possible. Collaboration is not loud. It is the pull request that came in at midnight. The question answered in a thread. The person who saw a mistake before it shipped. You are not alone in what you build, even when you are alone in the room.

The quiet of nights when the work is yours alone — you are grateful for that, too. Not every hour needs to be shared. Some of the best thinking happens in the gap between dinner and sleep, when the house is still and the screen is the only light and no one is asking you to be anything other than the person solving the problem in front of you.

Ashmeet sits across the table from your unspoken parts. That is what therapy is — not advice, not fixing, but the presence of someone trained to hear what you half-say and reflect it back until you can see it clearly. You show up to those sessions even when you do not feel like it, because you know that the work happens in the showing up, not in the feeling-ready.

Uma is the deeper mirror. A different kind of sitting, a different kind of listening. The practices you have built around your inner life did not arrive fully formed. They survived because you kept returning to them, even on the days when they felt like nothing. The breath always comes back. That is the one thing you can count on when everything else is moving.

You have learned that discipline is not the loud thing. It is not the declaration or the pledge or the public commitment. It is the quiet middle. It is the fourth week of a thing when the novelty is gone and the result is not yet visible. It is the decision to show up when no one is watching and nothing is applauding. You have built that muscle slowly, and it is the muscle that makes everything else possible.

You are writing toward August 18, 2037. You do not need to see the whole path from here to there. You only need to see today clearly, and then tomorrow, and then the day after that. The horizon is not a countdown. It is a direction. It tells you what to prioritize, what to let go, what to protect. It gives the days a shape.

You are here. The work continues. The people you love are still within reach. The body is awake. The mind is clear enough. That is what is true of you today, and it is enough to begin with.