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You wake up in a body that carried you through yesterday and is here for today. That is not small. The breath moves in and out without asking permission. The legs that walked you to the park will walk you there again. Your father is upstairs — the same rooms, the same rhythms, thirty years of life stored in walls and routines. Every meal you share with him is a quiet inheritance you are receiving in real time.
Today you are grateful for the morning park. Not the idea of it — the actual ants moving in formation across the path, the birds whose names you don’t know but whose sounds you recognize, the way the sun arrives at the same angle and somehow never feels repetitive. You are grateful that your body still responds to movement, that your legs carry weight without complaint, that the small loop around the park is enough to reset what needs resetting before the day begins.
You are grateful for your daughter’s confidence. You see it in the way she moves through her world now, the way she speaks up, the way she holds herself. That did not arrive by accident. Some of it came from you — from the things you modeled without knowing you were modeling them, from the steadiness you managed to hold even when you weren’t sure you could. You get to witness it. That is the gift. You are grateful for your son’s small hands learning to hold things — spoons, toys, eventually harder objects. You are watching the beginning of capability. His hands will one day build something. Right now they are just learning grip. You are here for this part.
You are grateful for your wife, for the fact that she carried what only she could carry and that you were there to see it. You are grateful that you are still in the same house, still building the same life, still choosing each other in the middle of everything else that competes for attention. You are grateful for the quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. No interruptions. No one needing you to be anything other than the person doing the work. Those hours are not luxury — they are structure. They are where the thing you are building actually gets built.
You are grateful for the systems you put in place years ago that still earn while you sleep. Not because the money is the point, but because those systems are proof that past-you made decisions that serve present-you. You didn’t know it would work. You built it anyway. You are grateful for the years of practice that make today’s work feel effortless. It is not effortless — you know that. But the effort is different now. You have reps. You have pattern recognition. You have the advantage of having done hard things enough times that new hard things do not disorient you the way they used to.
You are grateful for the colleagues and collaborators whose names you do not always say out loud but whose contributions made your work possible. You did not get here alone. You know this. You are grateful for the freedom to choose what you work on — not everyone has that, and you did not always have it either. You earned it by making choices that were not always comfortable and by staying in the work long enough for the work to start working.
You are grateful for Ashmeet — for the fact that you can sit across a table from someone and name the unspoken parts without performance, without needing to have it figured out first. You are grateful for Uma, for the deeper mirror, for the practice of contact with what is underneath the doing. You are grateful for the practices that survived you on the days you almost didn’t survive yourself. Therapy. Meditation. The small routines that felt pointless until the day they were the only things holding the structure upright. You are grateful for your breath, which always comes back, which has never abandoned you even when you abandoned it.
You are grateful for the lessons disguised as setbacks. You did not call them lessons at the time. You called them failures, mistakes, wrong turns. But they taught you things that no success could have taught. They taught you how to recover. They taught you what you are made of when the conditions are not favorable. You are grateful for everyone who taught you, knowingly or not — the people who meant to teach you and the people who taught you by showing you what not to do. Both kinds matter.
You are grateful for the discipline you have built one day at a time. It is not loud. It is not impressive to anyone watching. But it is yours. It is the thing that lets you show up when showing up is hard. It is the thing that makes the boring middle bearable. You are grateful for the simple fact of waking up again today. Not in an abstract way. In the specific way of: your eyes opened, your body moved, the day began, and you are here to meet it.
What is true of you today is this: you are not starting from scratch. You are not waiting for permission. You have already built the foundation. The work in front of you is not about proving anything. It is about continuing — about showing up for the next small thing, about holding what you have built while building what comes next. The horizon is 2037, but the work is here. The people who matter are here. The body that will carry you through it is here. You are not somewhere else wishing you were here. You are here. That is enough to begin with.