Tuesday, 30 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

The floor is cool under your feet when you first stand. Not cold — just the temperature of tile that has been sitting all night without anyone walking on it. Your weight shifts from one foot to the other and you can feel the small difference in texture where the grout lines cross, the faint ridge that your heel presses into without thinking. You have walked across this floor ten thousand times. This morning you feel it.

The vest goes over your shoulders and settles. Twenty pounds distributed across your chest and back. The weight is not shocking anymore. Your body knows it now. The straps sit in the grooves they have made over the last three weeks — the same pressure points, the same slight pull on your trapezius, the same way your spine straightens slightly to accommodate the load. You are not carrying this weight. You are wearing it. There is a difference. Carrying feels like work. Wearing feels like the weight is part of you now, like putting on a jacket that has shaped itself to your frame.

The door handle is smooth under your palm. Metal that has been touched so many times the finish has worn down to something softer than it started as. You do not grip it. You just rest your hand on it for a second before turning. The coolness moves into your skin. The house is still sleeping behind you. The door opens and the air changes — cooler outside, moving slightly, touching your face and your forearms. You step through and the difference in surface is immediate. Concrete now instead of tile. Rougher. Your feet adjust without asking your brain.

The park path is familiar but the feeling of it is different every morning depending on what happened overnight. Today it is slightly damp. Not wet enough to splash. Just enough that you can feel the give under your shoes, the way the gravel has softened and does not crunch the way it does when it is dry. Your ankles are reading the path. Small adjustments in angle. Small shifts in pressure. You are not thinking about balance. Your body is just doing it. The weight on your shoulders makes every step more deliberate. You cannot be careless. The ground matters more when you are carrying something.

Your son’s hand in yours last night was sticky. You do not know from what. Probably juice. Probably the mango he was eating that got everywhere. But when he reached up and grabbed your finger to pull you toward the bookshelf, the stickiness did not matter. What mattered was the size of his hand. The way his whole fist can barely close around two of your fingers. The way he squeezes when he wants you to pay attention. Not hard. Just enough that you feel the small bones of his hand pressing into yours. He does not know he is small. To him his hand is just his hand. But you know. You can feel how much room there is between his grip and the grip he will have someday when his hands are the size of yours.

The cup this morning is warm. Not hot enough to burn but warm enough that you want to hold it. The ceramic has that particular thickness that good mugs have — not thin like the cups at restaurants, not so thick that it feels clumsy. Just right. Your fingers wrap around it and the heat moves into your palms. You are not drinking yet. You are just holding. Letting the warmth sit in your hands for a moment before the tea cools and the morning asks you to start moving.

The chair you sit in to drink it has a worn spot on the armrest where your elbow always goes. The fabric is thinner there. Smoother. You can feel the difference between the worn part and the part that still has texture. Your elbow knows exactly where to land. You do not look. You just sit and your body finds the place it has found a thousand times before. The chair holds you. Not dramatically. It is not comfortable in the way expensive chairs are comfortable. It is just familiar. Your weight settles into it and the chair does not complain.

Your father’s hand on your shoulder yesterday was brief. Just a moment. Just his palm resting there while he stood behind your chair and looked at something on your screen. He did not squeeze. He did not pat. He just let his hand be there for three seconds and then lifted it and walked away. But you felt the weight of it. The particular heaviness of an old man’s hand. The skin looser than it used to be. The bones more prominent. The same hand that used to feel strong when you were a child and now feels careful, like he is aware of how much pressure is too much. You did not say anything. He did not say anything. But the touch said: I am still here. You are still here. We are still doing this.

The bedsheet tonight will be cool when you first lie down. Cotton that has been waiting all day for you to come back to it. Your legs will slide between the layers and the fabric will be smooth and slightly crisp and it will feel like relief. Not because the day was terrible. Just because the day is over and your body knows it. The pillow will take the shape of your head. The mattress will take the weight of your spine. You will not have to hold yourself up anymore. The bed will do it. And in that first moment of lying down, before sleep comes, before your mind starts running through tomorrow’s list, there will be just the feeling of being held by something that asks nothing of you except that you rest.

Your daughter climbed into your lap this morning while you were still waking up. She is getting too big for this. Her legs are long now. Her elbows are sharp. She does not fit the way she used to fit when she was three and you could hold all of her easily. But she still climbs up. And you still make room. Her back against your chest. Her head under your chin. The weight of her is substantial now. Real. She is not a baby. She is a person. And that person still wants to sit on you sometimes. Still wants the feeling of being held even though she does not need it the way she used to. You can feel her breathing. The rise and fall of her ribs against your ribs. The warmth of her moving into you. She will get up in a minute. She will go do something else. But right now she is here. Solid. Warm. Yours.

The ground under your feet in the park is still there when you finish the loop. You have been walking for twenty minutes but the earth has not moved. It has just held you. Held the weight of you plus the weight you are carrying. Held your steps. Held the rhythm of your walking. The ground does not care if you are grateful. It is just ground. But this morning you feel it. The steadiness of it. The fact that it has been here long before you started walking on it and it will be here long after. The fact that it holds you without asking for anything. You do not have to earn the ground. You just have to stand on it. And it is there. Every morning. Solid. Still. Enough.