Read
You step onto the path and the ground is already there. It has been there all night — cooling, settling, holding the weight of the park’s small citizens while you were elsewhere. Now your feet meet it. The first few steps tell you what kind of morning your legs woke into. A little stiff. A little slow. They will warm. They always do.
The ants are already working. You stop because one line crosses directly in front of you, a dark thread moving left to right with a purpose you cannot see. Each ant carries something — a crumb, a seed, a piece of leaf cut to exactly the size it can manage. They do not stop when your shadow falls over them. They do not look up. They are committed to the line, to the work, to the grammar of their small gravity. You could end their whole highway with one step. You do not. You go around.
The air is not cool anymore but it is not yet warm. There is a fifteen-minute window most mornings when the temperature sits in this in-between place, and you have learned to feel grateful for it without naming it. Your lungs take it in. The air does not ask what you will do with it. It just comes in, does its work in the blood, and leaves. You are breathing the same air the trees are breathing, the same air that moved over the ants, and this is not poetic — it is mechanical, cellular, true.
There is a slight incline near the south edge of the path. Not much. Maybe ten degrees. But your calves register it. They adjust their pull without asking you. The tendons shift. The muscles fire in a sequence you do not control and could not name. Your body has walked this incline a thousand times. It knows what to do. You are just the passenger, the aware thing riding along in a system that runs itself.
A myna lands on the path ahead. It does not scatter when you approach. It hops twice, decides you are not a threat, stays. You walk past and it tilts its head, tracking you with one eye. Then it goes back to whatever it was doing before you arrived. You are a interruption, briefly noted, then dismissed. The myna has work. You have work. You both continue.
The light is low and long. It comes in sideways through the trees and makes the dust visible — small particles suspended, drifting, catching the sun. You pass through a shaft of it and for three seconds you are walking through visible air. Then you are past it and the air goes invisible again, but it did not stop being there. It was there before the light named it. It will be there after.
Your heart is beating a little faster now. Not much. Just enough to register. The pump is working. It has been working since before you knew you had a heart, since before you had language for pulse or rhythm or the idea of a thing that keeps you alive by never stopping. It is working now. It will work later when you sit at the desk. It will work tonight when you lie down. It does not take a day off. It does not ask for acknowledgment. It beats.
There is sweat starting at the base of your neck. Not much. Just the first sign that the body is adjusting, cooling itself before it needs cooling. The skin is doing its job. Millions of pores opening, releasing heat, keeping the core temperature steady while you move through the warming morning. You did not tell your skin to do this. It saw the work coming and prepared.
You pass the bench where the old man usually sits. He is not there yet. Or maybe he is not coming today. You do not know his name. You have never spoken to him. But most mornings he is there with his newspaper, and on the mornings he is not, you notice. The bench is empty. The absence registers. You keep walking.
A small stone has worked its way into the tread of your shoe. You feel it under the ball of your foot — not painful, just present. You could stop and remove it. You do not. It is small enough to tolerate, and you are almost done with the loop. The stone will come out later, or it will not. Either way, the foot will adapt. It always does.
The path curves back toward the gate. You have been walking for twenty-three minutes. You did not time it, but your body knows the length of the loop the way it knows the distance from your bed to the bathroom in the dark. The rhythm of your breath is settling. The heart is easing back. The sweat is drying in the air that is now definitely warmer than when you started.
You reach the gate. You do not stop to stretch or check your phone or mark the walk complete in some app. You just step off the path and onto the pavement and the walk is over. It was not profound. It was not a meditation or a revelation. It was just a body moving through a park, under weight, under light, through air. The ants continued their line. The myna found what it was looking for. The trees stood. The ground held.
You walked. That is all. That is enough.