# Demarking the Everyday ## The Lines We Draw We spend our days drawing invisible lines. A job title separates us from neighbors. A political view builds walls between friends. Even our own reflections carry marks—scars from old mistakes, badges of achievements we cling to. These lines give shape to chaos, but they also box us in. They whisper that we're defined by what stands out, not what lies beneath. ## Letting Go of the Lines Demarking isn't erasure; it's gentle release. Imagine wiping fog from a window, not to destroy the glass but to see clearly through it. Without the marks of status or story, we meet each other as we are: tired after a long walk, joyful over a shared meal, simply human. In quiet moments, I've sat with a friend, dropping titles and histories, and found a deeper connection waiting. ## A Practice for Any Day To demark takes little more than attention: - Pause before labeling a stranger's choice as wrong; ask what you don't see. - When doubt marks your mirror, breathe and let the image soften. - In conversation, listen without the urge to categorize or compete. On this spring day in 2026, as the world spins faster, demarking feels like coming home—to ourselves, to others. *_In the space between marks, we find room to simply be._*