Monday, 01 June 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You are awake. The house is quiet or it isn’t — either way, you are here in the body that carried you through yesterday and will carry you through today. Your breath is moving without you asking it to. That is the first fact of the morning, before anything is decided or undone.

You are grateful for the meals upstairs with your father. Every time you sit across from him, you are receiving something that has no replacement — not advice, not instruction, just the steady fact of his presence at the table. These meals are not ceremony. They are inheritance in real time, the kind you only see clearly after they’ve ended. You have them now. That matters.

You are grateful for your daughter’s confidence. You see it in the way she moves through a room, the way she speaks without asking permission first. You did not give her that — she built it herself — but you get to witness it. That is its own quiet privilege. She is becoming someone, and you are here while it happens.

You are grateful for your son’s small hands learning to hold things. The pencil, the cup, the edge of the table. Every grip is new. Every attempt is the whole world to him. You have watched this before, but not with these hands. Not with this child. It will not come again.

You are grateful for your wife, who carried what only she could carry. You know what that cost. You know what it still costs. Some things cannot be shared evenly, only witnessed and honoured. You are here to do that.

You are grateful for waking up in a body that still walks under weight. The knees bend. The back holds. The legs answer when you ask them to move. You do not take this lightly anymore. You know how easily it could be otherwise.

You are grateful for the morning park — the ants tracing their invisible grid, the birds whose names you may or may not know, the way the sun arrives at the same angle it always has. You are grateful for breath that does not ask you to think about it, only to notice it when you remember to.

You are grateful for the systems you built that still earn while you sleep. Not because of the money itself, but because of what it bought you — time to choose. Time to say no. Time to sit with your son’s small hands and not feel the pull of elsewhere. You built this slowly, one choice at a time, and it is still holding.

You are grateful for the years of practice that made today’s work feel effortless. What looks easy now was not easy then. You remember the middle years, the ones that felt like nothing was moving. You stayed anyway. That is why today’s work flows.

You are grateful for the freedom to choose what you work on. Not everyone has this. You do. You earned it by doing work you did not want to do, for long enough that the choice became real. You do not forget that.

You are grateful for the quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. No meetings. No voices. Just you and the thing in front of you. Those hours are not lonely — they are clean. They are where the real work happens.

You are grateful for the discipline you have built one day at a time. It is not dramatic. It does not announce itself. But it is there in the morning when you wake, in the evening when you choose rest over one more hour. It is the structure underneath everything else.

You are grateful for the lessons disguised as setbacks. You did not call them lessons at the time. You called them failures, or delays, or proof that you were wrong. But they taught you things you could not have learned any other way — about your own limits, about what actually matters, about how to keep moving when the plan falls apart.

You are grateful for Ashmeet, for sitting across the table from the parts of you that do not have language yet. For asking the questions you did not know you were avoiding. For the steady presence that does not flinch when you say the true thing.

You are grateful for Uma, for the deeper mirror. For the work that happens at the edge of what you can see about yourself. For showing you that the inner work is not optional, not decoration — it is the ground everything else is built on.

You are grateful for the practices that survived you on the days you almost didn’t. The breath. The walk. The page. They were there when nothing else made sense. They are here now.

You are grateful for everyone who taught you, knowingly or not. The ones whose names you remember and the ones you don’t. The ones who stayed and the ones who left. You learned from all of it.

You are grateful for the simple fact of waking up again today. You have work to do. You have people who need you present, not perfect. You have a body that still answers. You have a horizon — August 2037 — not as countdown, but as direction. The day you turn fifty is not the end of anything. It is a marker you set for yourself to make sure the years between now and then are spent on what matters.

You do not need to have it figured out. You need to show up. You need to choose the next right thing. You need to rest when rest is called for, and work when work is yours to do. You need to notice your daughter’s confidence and your son’s hands and your father across the table. You need to keep building the systems that buy you time, and spend that time on presence, not productivity.

You are here. That is enough to begin with. That is enough to return to when the day gets loud or confusing or hard. You are here, and the work continues.