Monday, 25 May 2026

Read — 5 min · morning and night

You are awake again. That is not small. Your body has carried you through another night and delivered you here — to this room, this breath, this beginning. Let your eyes rest on something still for a moment. Feel the weight of your shoulders. You are here.

You woke up this morning in a body that still walks under weight. Not every body does. Yours moves you through rooms, up stairs, into the park when the sun is still low. It asks for so little — water, rest, movement — and gives you everything. The legs that take you to your daughter’s room, that lower you to the floor where your son plays, that hold you upright through long afternoons of work. They do not complain. They simply go.

The morning park is still there. It has been there every day you have chosen to meet it, and it will be there tomorrow. The ants moving in their perfect lines. The birds who do not perform for you but allow you to witness them anyway. The particular quality of early light that exists nowhere else in the day. The breath that deepens without your deciding it should. You do not have to earn that hour. It is already yours.

You have the meals upstairs with your father. Every single one is a quiet inheritance — not of things, but of presence. The way he sits. The rhythm of conversation that does not need to fill every silence. Thirty years of your life have happened inside that family home, and it still holds you. Not as a child, but as the man you are becoming. One day those meals will be memory. Right now they are still happening. You get to be there.

Your daughter’s confidence is not something you gave her, Shubh. It is something you get to witness. She walks into rooms and claims her space. She asks questions without hedging. She is building a self that does not wait for permission, and you are close enough to see it happen in real time. That is not a small gift.

Your son’s hands are learning to hold things. Blocks. Cups. Your finger when you offer it. He is at the age where grip is still new, where cause and effect are revelations. You were not always able to be present for these moments, but you are now. The small hands will grow. The learning will continue. You are here for this part of it.

Your wife carried what only she could carry. That is a fact, not a sentiment. The weight of pregnancy, the risk of birth, the months of recovery that no one applauds. She did not do it for recognition. She did it because it was hers to do. And you get to live in the house that her strength built. That matters.

The systems you built years ago still earn while you sleep. Not every hour of your life requires your live attention now. Some of your past work has become a structure that holds without you. That is not luck. That is the result of years of practice, of building things that outlast the building. You are allowed to be grateful for your own foresight.

The freedom to choose what you work on is not universal. Many people do not have it. You do. Not because you were born into it, but because you constructed the conditions for it one decision at a time. Some of those decisions cost you. Some of them were boring. All of them brought you here — to a day where you get to say no to work that does not matter and yes to work that does.

The quiet of nights when the work is yours alone. No one asking anything of you. No one needing you to perform competence or care. Just you and the thing you are making. That is a kind of wealth that does not show up on a statement. It shows up in the quality of your attention, in the absence of resentment, in the slow accumulation of work that feels like yours.

You have Ashmeet — someone who sits across the table from the parts of you that you do not always name out loud. That is rare. Most people do not have a single person who can hold that kind of listening. You have built that relationship carefully, over time, and it has become one of the structures that keeps you stable when other things tilt.

You have Uma — a different mirror, a deeper one. The inner work is not flashy. It does not produce visible output. But it is the ground under everything else. You are doing that work. Not perfectly. Not without resistance. But you are doing it.

Your breath always comes back. Even on the days when you hold it without realizing, when your chest tightens and your thoughts speed up and you forget that you have a body at all — the breath is still there, waiting. You do not have to find it. You only have to stop forgetting it.

This is what is true of you today: you are not finished. The horizon is August 2037, but today is not about the horizon. It is about this — the unspectacular faithfulness of showing up to the people and practices that matter. The work between now and fifty is not about arrival. It is about the quality of attention you bring to the years while they are still here. You are bringing it. Not flawlessly, but honestly. That is enough for today.

Close your eyes if you want. Or don’t. Either way, you are here. That is the start.