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The lungs filled this morning before you asked them to. In, out. A rhythm that has not missed a beat since the day you were born. Forty-some years of breathing and you have never had to remember to do it. The body just does it. Keeps doing it. Even when you are asleep. Even when you are not paying attention. Even now, as you read this, the chest is rising and falling and the blood is moving oxygen to places that need it and you are not managing any of it.
The heart has been beating in the dark of your chest since before you had language. Seventy times a minute. A hundred thousand times a day. No days off. No breaks. Just the steady pump that moves blood through seventy-five thousand miles of vessels while you walk, while you sleep, while you sit at your desk not thinking about the fact that you are staying alive. The heart does not need your gratitude. It does not need your attention. It just keeps working. But it is working. Right now. This second. And the next.
The eyes opened when morning came. Lids lifted. Pupils adjusted to the light. The lens focused. The optic nerve fired. And suddenly there was the ceiling, the room, the window, the day. You did not have to assemble the image. The eyes just gave it to you. Two small spheres of tissue and fluid that turn photons into sight. That let you see your daughter’s face. That let you read. That let you find your way through the house in the half-dark before anyone else wakes. They are still working. Still clear. Still able to see the ant on the path, the word on the page, the look on your father’s face that tells you he is tired even when he says he is fine.
The legs carried you this morning. Bones and muscle and tendon doing what they have done ten thousand mornings before this one. The weight went on your shoulders and the legs said yes. No negotiation. No complaint. Just the work of standing, of stepping, of holding you upright while gravity pulls down and the ground pushes up and somewhere in between, you move forward. The knees bent when they needed to bend. The ankles adjusted on uneven ground. The feet, those complicated assemblies of twenty-six bones each, absorbed the impact and distributed the load and did not ask for anything in return.
The spine held you today. Thirty-three vertebrae stacked like stones in a cairn, holding the weight of your head, your ribs, your arms, everything above the hips. It curved where it needed to curve. It flexed when you bent to pick something up. It kept the signals moving from your brain to your fingers, your toes, your gut. You did not think about it once. But it was working. Holding you upright. Keeping you from collapsing into yourself.
The hands did what hands do. Gripped the handle of the vest. Opened the door. Held the pen. Typed the words. Picked up the cup. Touched your son’s head as you passed. The fingers moved independently, each one responding to commands you did not consciously send. Tendons pulled. Joints articulated. The skin on your palms, thick enough to protect but thin enough to feel, registered pressure and temperature and texture and sent the information back to your brain faster than you could name what you were touching.
The stomach broke down the food you gave it. Acids and enzymes doing their chemical work in the dark, turning what you ate into what your body can use. You did not supervise. You did not manage the process. You just swallowed and the stomach took over. And hours later the energy was there when you needed it. The cells fed. The muscles fueled. The brain running on glucose delivered by a system that never stops, never sleeps, never waits for permission.
The kidneys filtered your blood today. Millions of nephrons sifting waste from water, balancing salt and minerals, keeping the chemistry of your body in the narrow range where life happens. They processed forty gallons of fluid and returned almost all of it, cleaned, back into circulation. You did not feel it happening. You will not know it happened until tomorrow morning when the bladder signals and you empty what the kidneys decided you did not need. But the work was done. Quiet. Efficient. Essential.
The skin held you together. Two square meters of barrier between your insides and the world. It kept out the bacteria. It kept in the moisture. It healed the small cuts you do not remember getting. It sensed the heat, the cold, the touch of fabric, the brush of air. It grew new cells to replace the ones you shed. Thirty thousand cells fell away while you read this sentence and thirty thousand more are already in place. The body renewing itself without asking if you are ready.
The liver did three hundred jobs today that you could not name if someone asked. Filtered toxins. Stored energy. Produced proteins. Regulated hormones. Processed the medication, the alcohol, the chemicals your body encounters and does not want. It did all this while you were thinking about other things. It will do it again tomorrow. And the day after. Until it cannot. But today, it could. And it did.
The immune system fought wars you will never see. White blood cells patrolling, identifying, neutralizing threats before they became infections. Antibodies remembering past invaders, ready to respond faster the next time. Inflammation rising where tissue was damaged, bringing the resources needed for repair. You felt none of this. You just stayed well. Because the body fought and won battles you did not know were happening.
The brain kept you conscious. A hundred billion neurons firing in patterns too complex to map, generating the experience of being you. The sensation of reading these words. The memory of this morning’s walk. The recognition of your son’s voice calling from the other room. The ability to move your hand when you want to move it. To speak when you want to speak. To think this thought and then the next one. The electricity of being alive, running on twenty watts, less power than a refrigerator bulb.
The vestibular system in your inner ear kept you balanced. Three tiny canals filled with fluid and hair cells, sensing every movement of your head, sending constant updates to your brain about which way is up. You did not fall today. Not once. Because the body knew where it was in space and adjusted muscle tension a hundred times a second to keep you upright. You did not have to think about it. You just walked and the body did the geometry.
The voice box shaped air into words. Vocal cords vibrating. Tongue and lips and teeth forming sounds. Breath controlled and released in patterns that carry meaning. You spoke to your daughter. You answered your son. You said something to your wife. And the words came out because the body knows how to turn thought into sound. You learned this as a child and now it is automatic. But it is still happening. Still working. The machinery of speech running smooth.
The hands are warm because the heart is pumping blood to the fingers. The room is in focus because the eye muscles are adjusting the lens. The breath is quiet because the diaphragm is pulling down and the lungs are expanding and the alveoli are exchanging oxygen for carbon dioxide at a rate that exactly matches what you need right now. Not too much. Not too little. Just right. Because the body knows.
You are not managing any of this. You are just living inside a system that is managing itself. Balancing. Adjusting. Repairing. Defending. Growing. Replacing. And all of it is happening right now. This second. While you are reading. While you are breathing without thinking about breathing. While your heart is beating without your permission. While the quiet machine that is your body continues to do what it has always done.
It will not do this forever. The machine will slow. Parts will fail. The heart will stop. The lungs will empty and not fill again. The brain will go dark. But not today. Today the machine is still running. Still working. Still keeping you here. Still letting you walk in the morning. Still letting you hold your son. Still letting you see your daughter’s face. Still letting you be alive in this body, in this moment, in this ordinary morning that is only ordinary because the extraordinary keeps happening without fanfare.
The body woke up working. And it is still working now.