# Demarking the Lines ## Seeing Without Lines Life draws lines everywhere. We mark calendars with deadlines, label people with roles, and etch expectations into our days. These marks help us navigate, but they also box us in. Demarking starts with noticing them—not erasing blindly, but questioning gently. What if the line between work and rest isn't sharp? What if a stranger's hurried glance isn't judgment, just a passing cloud? In quiet moments, I pick up a notebook filled with my scribbles. Instead of adding more, I let the pencil hover, then trace over old marks until they fade. It's not destruction; it's release. The page breathes again. ## A Walk in the Unmarked Field Picture a field after rain. Muddy paths form from footsteps, turning open ground into a maze. Demarking is stepping off the path, feeling the earth yield without resistance. Last spring, on a walk near the river, I ignored the worn trail. Grass brushed my ankles, birds called without agenda. No signs told me where to go; I simply went. This isn't about chaos. It's trust in the unmarked way. Boundaries dissolve, and connection emerges—to place, to others, to the steady rhythm inside. ## Everyday Unmarking Try it small: - Pause before labeling a feeling: Is it anger, or just tight shoulders? - Listen fully in conversation, without mentally checking off points. - End the day by listing one line to soften, like "must finish" becoming "can rest." Over time, demarking lightens the load. We move freer, see clearer. *In the unmarked space, we find our truest steps.* *— demark.md, March 10, 2026*