# The Mark We Leave ## What Demark Means The word demark carries a quiet weight. To demark is to draw a line, to say this is where one thing ends and another begins. It is an act of clarity in a world that often feels blurred. On a map it might separate countries. In a life it might separate before from after, noise from silence, what we accept from what we refuse. We demark every day without noticing. We close a door. We choose not to answer a message. We decide what deserves our attention and what does not. Each small boundary is a form of honesty. ## The Space Between Lines There is tenderness in knowing where you end and others begin. Good fences do not always make good neighbors, but good boundaries often make better friends, better parents, better versions of ourselves. When we demark with care, we protect what matters without building walls of fear. I remember watching my grandfather mark the edge of his garden each spring. He used old twine and wooden stakes. The line was never perfectly straight, yet it was clear. Inside the line he tended tomatoes and basil with steady hands. Outside the line he let the wild grass grow. Both spaces were loved, just differently. His quiet ritual taught me that limits are not rejections. They are a way of giving each thing its proper attention. ## A Gentle Practice Most of us are learning how to draw these lines without apology. We learn to say no with kindness. We learn to protect our time the way we protect our sleep or our breath. The better we become at demarking, the more generous we can actually be, because our yeses finally mean something. *In a noisy age, the calmest power may simply be knowing where to draw the line.* *12 July 2026*