Sunday, 07 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You wake in the same room you have woken in for years. The air has not changed. Your breath has not changed. The morning is what it has always been — quiet, unhurried, waiting for nothing.

Today you will move through hours that belong to no one but you. The work you have built still earns. The systems still run. The choices you made five years ago still pay you in time, and that time is yours to spend on what you are becoming, not what you must survive.

You are grateful for the body that wakes with you. For legs that walk you to the park without negotiation. For lungs that fill and empty whether you watch them or not. This body has carried you through years you did not think you would make it through, and it is still here, still willing, still capable of more than you ask of it most days. You do not take that lightly anymore.

You are grateful for the morning park. For the ants that move in their precise lines, carrying what is too heavy for them alone. For the birds whose names you do not know but whose presence you notice. For the particular angle of early light that only exists at this hour, in this season, in this exact spot where you stand. These things cost nothing. They ask nothing. They simply are, and you get to witness them.

You are grateful for the meals upstairs with your father. Every plate of food is also a plate of time. Every conversation, however ordinary, is part of a total that you cannot count but can feel diminishing. You know this. You have always known this. And still you go upstairs. Still you sit. Still you eat. These are not obligations. These are inheritances you receive while the giver is still breathing.

You are grateful for your daughter’s confidence. You see her walk into rooms you would have hesitated at the door of. You see her speak without the pause you still carry. She did not learn this from watching you shrink — she learned it from watching you try anyway. That is enough. That has always been enough.

You are grateful for your son’s small hands. For the way they reach for things they do not yet have words for. For the way he learns to hold a cup, a crayon, a moment. You are watching him build the motor memory of existing in the world, and you get to be the one who steadies him when he tips.

You are grateful for your wife, who carried what only she could carry. You know what that sentence holds. You do not need to expand it here. It is enough to name it. It is enough to remember that some debts are not paid, only honored.

You are grateful for the quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. For the house asleep around you. For the particular quality of focus that arrives after ten p.m. when no one needs you to be anything but the person doing the work. You have protected this time. You have said no to preserve it. That was the right choice.

You are grateful for the years of practice that make today’s work feel effortless. You know it is not effortless. You know it is the result of a thousand hours you did not want to sit through. But the people who see the output do not see the hours, and that is fine. You see them. You remember what it cost to get here, and that makes today’s ease earned, not lucky.

You are grateful for Ashmeet — for the sessions where you sit across the table from the parts of you that do not get airtime anywhere else. For someone who listens without fixing. Who reflects without flattening. You are learning to speak about the interior without translating it first, and that is a skill you did not think you would need to build.

You are grateful for Uma — for the work that goes deeper than Tuesday afternoons. For the mirror that shows not just what you do, but what you hold underneath it. You resist it sometimes. You still show up. That is the practice.

You are grateful for the practices that survived you on the days you almost didn’t. For the breath that returned even when you wanted to hold it. For the body that kept waking even when waking felt like starting over. For the small disciplines you kept doing when nothing else made sense. They anchored you. They still anchor you.

You are grateful for the discipline of the boring middle. For the fact that most of your days are not dramatic. Most of your wins are incremental. Most of your progress happens in the margins between breakfast and the first call. You are no longer waiting for the life that starts after this one. This is it. This has always been it.

You are grateful for the lessons that arrived disguised as setbacks. You do not need to list them. You know which ones they were. You know what they taught you. You know that you would not choose them again, and you know that you would not give back what they left you with.

You are grateful for everyone who taught you, knowingly or not. For the people whose names you remember and the ones you don’t. For the conversations that redirected you. For the refusals that rerouted you. For the silence that forced you to figure it out yourself.

Today, Shubh, you are the same person you were yesterday. You are also not. Something in you is different because you woke up and read this. Something shifted because you paused. The day will ask things of you. You will answer some and defer others. You will do work that matters and work that doesn’t. You will be patient and you will be impatient. All of that is fine.

What is true of you today is this: you are building something longer than a quarter. You are living inside a body that still works. You are known by people who matter. You are doing work that earns you time. And you are here, now, reading this, which means you are still choosing to show up.

That is enough.