Monday, 15 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

The heart that beats in your chest right now has beaten roughly two and a half billion times since you were born. It will beat another thirty or forty thousand times before you sleep tonight. You do not tell it when to contract. You do not schedule its rhythm. It simply works — a fist-sized muscle squeezing and releasing, squeezing and releasing, moving blood through seventy-five thousand miles of vessels while you think about other things.

Your lungs are pulling in air. Five hundred million alveoli are trading oxygen for carbon dioxide in an exchange so ordinary you forget it is happening. The diaphragm drops, the chest expands, the air flows in. Then out. Then in again. This has been happening since the moment you were born and it will happen until the moment it stops, and you have almost no conscious participation in any of it. The machine is running. It ran all night while you were absent from yourself.

The eyes that opened this morning contain a hundred million photoreceptors. They are translating wavelengths of light into electrical signals, sending them down the optic nerve to a brain that assembles them into the image you call the world. You see the ceiling. You see the window. You see the shape of the room you have woken in a thousand times. This seeing is not simple. It is a coordinated cascade of chemical and electrical events happening faster than you can name them, and it happens every waking second without asking for your approval.

Your spine is holding you upright. Thirty-three vertebrae stacked like a tower, separated by discs that compress and expand with every movement, held in place by ligaments and muscles that adjust their tension without you issuing a single command. Stand up. Walk to the bathroom. The spine bends, flexes, rotates — a column of bone and nerve that carries signals from the brain to the body and back again. It has been doing this for decades. It is doing it now.

The legs that will carry you to the park in an hour are waiting. Femur, tibia, fibula. Muscle groups with names you do not remember — quadriceps, hamstrings, gastrocnemius. They will bear your full weight with every step. They will push off the ground, absorb the impact, stabilize the joints, and they will do this hundreds of times without hesitation. They do not ask for rest between steps. They do not negotiate the incline. They simply carry.

The hands that will hold the cup, turn the page, type the sentence — they are already awake. Twenty-seven bones in each hand, thirty-four muscles moving them, thousands of nerve endings translating pressure and temperature into sensation. The fingertips can detect a surface variation of less than a micron. They know the difference between cotton and silk before your mind names the fabric. They are holding the shape of every object you have ever touched in a library of tactile memory you do not consciously access.

The stomach will digest the breakfast without asking what you want it to do. Acids will break down the food, enzymes will split molecules, the intestines will pull nutrients across membranes and into the blood. This will take hours. You will not feel most of it. The system knows its work and does it in the dark, behind walls of muscle and tissue, converting the outside world into fuel the body can use.

The liver is filtering toxins. The kidneys are balancing salt and water. The lymph nodes are scanning for invaders. The skin is regulating temperature, shedding dead cells, growing new ones, sealing itself against the world. Every system is running its protocols, cross-checking with other systems, adjusting in real time to the thousand variables of simply being alive.

Your brain is consuming twenty percent of your body’s oxygen despite being only two percent of your body weight. Right now, eighty-six billion neurons are firing, forming connections, pruning old pathways, consolidating memory, regulating mood, keeping the autonomic systems humming beneath your awareness. It is doing all of this while also reading these words, tracking their meaning, comparing them to other things you know. The machine is thinking about the machine while the machine runs.

The body you woke up in is the same body you will walk through the park in. The same body that will sit across from your father at the table. The same body that will lift your son when he reaches for you. It is not perfect. It carries old injuries, small inefficiencies, the accumulated wear of decades. But it is here. It is working. It woke up ready to do another day’s work without asking if you deserved it.

You did not build this body. You inherited the blueprint and it assembled itself — cells dividing, organs forming, systems coming online one by one until a thing that could not survive became a thing that could walk and speak and build and love. You maintain it, poorly sometimes, but it tolerates your neglect with more patience than you have earned. It asks so little. Sleep. Water. Food. Movement. It will run on those basics for decades if you let it.

The machine is quiet. It does not announce its victories. The heart does not celebrate the billionth beat. The lungs do not take a bow after a day of flawless respiration. The legs do not expect gratitude for carrying you up the stairs. They simply do the work they were built to do, and they do it again today.

Before the phone. Before the list. Before the roles and the names and the weight of what the day will ask — there is this. The body, awake. The breath, moving. The heart, beating. The astonishing machine that needs no permission to continue.