# Demarking ## Wiping the Slate Clean Life leaves marks on us—scratches from old falls, ink from hurried notes, smudges from too many fingers touching the same spot. Demarking is the quiet choice to lift them away. Not with harsh scrubbing that scars deeper, but with a soft cloth and steady breath. Imagine a window fogged by winter chill: you breathe warm air and wipe, and suddenly the world sharpens. That's demarking: clearing just enough to see your own reflection clearly, undistorted. ## The Freedom in Letting Go We hold these marks like maps, fearing we'll lose our way without them. But what if the truest direction lies in the unmarked expanse? Demarking invites simplicity. It means dropping the label of "failure" from a past mistake, peeling away "expert" from a skill you're still learning. In relationships, it dissolves the lines we draw between "us" and "them," revealing shared ground. Here's how it unfolds in small ways: - Pause before reacting; ask if the mark you're seeing is real or drawn by habit. - Release one expectation daily, like leaving a note unwritten. - Notice the blank spaces in your day—they hold room for what matters. ## A Return to Essence On mornings like this one in early 2026, when frost etches temporary patterns on glass, demarking feels most natural. It's not about perfection, but presence. The marks will return; that's life. But each wipe reminds us: beneath it all, we're unmarked, whole. *In demarking, we find not emptiness, but endless possibility.*