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You open your eyes. The room is still dim. Your breath is already there — it arrived before the thought of it. The weight of the blanket is familiar. The body beneath it is yours, and it is awake again.
Before the day assembles itself into tasks and decisions, you can land here. Not in what you hope today will become, but in what is already true before you move.
You are grateful for the meals upstairs with your father. Each one is unremarkable until you remember it is not infinite. The rice, the conversation that doesn’t always need filling, the fact that he is still here and so are you. Every meal is a quiet inheritance you are receiving in real time. You do not need to say this aloud. You just need to know it while it is still happening.
You are grateful for your daughter’s confidence. Not the loud kind that demands applause, but the steady kind you see when she makes a choice and doesn’t look back to check if it was right. You get to watch that. You get to be the one in the room when she learns she can trust her own decisions. That is not a small thing. That is the work paying forward in ways no balance sheet will ever show.
You are grateful for your son’s small hands learning to hold things. The spoon. The edge of the table. Your finger when you walk him somewhere new. His hands will grow and forget they were ever this small, but you are here now while they still are. The patience this requires of you — the slowing down, the letting him try and fail and try again — that is presence. You are building it one morning at a time.
You are grateful for your wife, who carried what only she could carry. The things you could not do for her, the weight she held alone, the quiet months and years when the work was invisible and you were elsewhere building what you thought mattered. She did not wait for permission or applause. She just did it. You know this. You do not always say it, but you know it.
You are grateful for waking up in a body that still walks under weight. The legs that carry you without complaint. The breath that arrives without asking. The fact that you can still choose to move, to walk to the park in the early light, to feel the ground under your feet and call it ordinary. It will not always be ordinary. Right now it is. That is enough.
You are grateful for the systems you built that still earn while you sleep. Not because money solves everything, but because you did the work once and it continues to work. That is leverage. That is the fruit of the years when you didn’t yet know what you were building. The discipline you practiced when no one was watching is paying you now in time — the one currency you cannot mint.
You are grateful for the years of practice that made today’s work feel effortless. It is not effortless. You just cannot see the effort anymore because it has become bone-deep. The things that once required all your attention now happen in the margins. That is mastery arriving quietly, the way it always does — not with a ceremony, but with the simple fact that you can do today what you could not do five years ago.
You are grateful for Ashmeet — for the one who sits across the table from your unspoken parts and does not flinch. For the space where you can say the things you do not say anywhere else. For the mirror that does not flatter or fix, just reflects. That relationship is not extra. It is structural. It is one of the beams holding the house up.
You are grateful for Uma — for the deeper mirror, the one that shows you what lies beneath the daily weather. The work you do there is not visible to anyone else, but you know what it costs and what it gives back. It is the practice that survived you on the days you almost didn’t survive yourself. That is not poetry. That is just true.
You are grateful for the quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. The house is asleep. The laptop is open. No one needs you for the next two hours. You are not running from anything or toward anything. You are just working because the work is worth doing and you are the one doing it. That sovereignty — the ability to choose what you build and when — that did not come for free. You earned it in the years when you had no choice. You still remember what that felt like.
You are grateful for the discipline you have built one day at a time. Not the loud kind that announces itself, but the boring kind that just shows up. The kind that doesn’t need conditions to be perfect. The kind that knows the difference between hard and impossible, and keeps choosing hard. That is the real infrastructure. That is what makes everything else possible.
You are grateful for the simple fact of waking up again today. You do not know how many more times this will happen. No one does. But it happened this morning. The day is here. You are here. The people you love are still close enough to reach.
You do not need today to be extraordinary. You do not need to solve everything or become someone new. What is already true is this: you have done the work that needed doing. You are still doing it. The people who matter know you are here. The body still works. The breath still comes.
That is what you carry into the day — not a list of what you hope will happen, but the quiet knowledge of what is already real.