Sunday, 31 May 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You open your eyes. The room is still. Your breath moves in and out without you asking it to. The weight of your body presses into the mattress — evidence that you are here again, offered another morning. There is nothing you must do in this moment except notice that you woke up.

You are grateful for the legs that have carried you without complaint. They are not young legs. They have walked you through years of decisions that felt irreversible at the time and turned out to be just one path among many. They have stood under the weight of days when you thought the ground might not hold. They did hold. You are still walking. That is not a small thing.

You are grateful for the meals upstairs with your father. Every one of them is a quiet inheritance — not of money or land, but of the shape a life takes when it is lived in one place, among the same walls, for thirty years. You do not always have the words for what passes between you at that table. Sometimes it is just food and silence. But the silence has its own texture now. It says: we are still here. You will miss those meals when they are no longer possible. You know this. So you sit down when you can.

You are grateful for your daughter’s confidence. You see it in the way she moves through rooms, the way she speaks without waiting for permission. That did not come from nowhere. Some of it came from you — from the days you chose to be present even when the work pulled at you. Some of it came from watching you stumble and still get up. She is learning that falling is not the end of the story. You taught her that without saying it out loud.

You are grateful for your son’s small hands learning to hold things. One day those hands will be larger than yours. One day he will not need you to open jars or carry him up stairs. But right now, in this brief window, he reaches for you when he cannot manage alone. You do not take that for granted. You have seen enough of life to know that the reaching does not last forever.

You are grateful for your wife, who carried what only she could carry. You did not carry the pregnancy. You did not carry the sleepless months or the way a body reshapes itself to make room for new life. But you are here now, carrying what you can carry — the meals, the mornings, the steady presence when things feel too much. Partnership is not sameness. It is two people choosing, again and again, to show up in the ways they are able.

You are grateful for the systems you built that still earn while you sleep. This was not luck. This was years of figuring out what worked, what didn’t, and what could run without your hands on it every hour. The money arrives not because you are special, but because you stayed long enough to learn the boring parts. Mastery is repetition until the hard thing becomes ordinary.

You are grateful for the morning park — ants, birds, sun, breath. It is the same park every day. The same path. But it is never the same light. You have learned to notice this. You have learned that the body needs more than a bed and a desk. It needs to move under open sky. It needs to remember that it is not just a vehicle for the mind.

You are grateful for Ashmeet, who sits across the table from your unspoken parts. You do not always like what comes up in those conversations. But you go anyway, because you have learned that the things you do not say out loud do not disappear. They wait. They grow heavier. Ashmeet gives you a place to set them down and look at them without flinching. That is rare.

You are grateful for Uma, who holds the deeper mirror. The work you do there is slower. It does not yield to effort the way other work does. But it is changing you in ways you will only see years from now. You trust that. You have learned to trust what you cannot yet see.

You are grateful for the quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. No one is watching. No one is measuring. You are free to try things that might not work. You are free to build something no one asked for. That freedom was expensive. You paid for it in years of doing work that was not yours. Now you choose. That is worth protecting.

You are grateful for the lessons disguised as setbacks. You did not call them lessons at the time. You called them failures, dead ends, proof that you were not enough. But they were not proof of anything except that you were trying. You are still here. The things that almost ended you did not end you. That matters more than the wins.

You are grateful for your breath, which always comes back. Even on the days when your chest felt tight and your mind ran circles you could not escape — your breath kept arriving. In and out. In and out. You did not have to earn it. You did not have to deserve it. It just came.

The day ahead will bring what it brings. You will meet some of it well. Some of it you will fumble. That is how days go. But underneath the fumbling and the meeting, this remains true: you are here. You are building something that matters. You are loved by people whose names you know. You have work that moves the world, even if only by inches. And tonight, when you lie down again, you will have done what you could with what you had. That has always been enough.