# Demarking the Everyday ## Lines We Quietly Draw We live surrounded by invisible lines. On maps, they separate countries; in our minds, they divide people into friends or strangers, right from wrong. These marks start small—a quick judgment, a habit of sorting the world into boxes. Over time, they thicken, turning neighbors into others and simple moments into battles. In 2026, with screens glowing brighter than ever, these lines feel sharper, pulling us apart even as we sit closer. ## The Soft Act of Erasure Demarking isn't about destruction. It's a gentle lift, like smoothing sand after footprints. Imagine walking a beach at dawn, waves washing away yesterday's traces. No force, just release. When we demark, we stop clinging to those lines. A conversation flows without labels. A stranger becomes a fellow traveler. This isn't forgetting differences—it's seeing them soften, revealing the shared ground beneath. ## One Tide's Lesson Last spring, I watched my young niece draw on the fogged window. Bold lines for houses, squiggles for trees. Then she paused, palm flat, and wiped it half-clean. "Now it's a story," she said. The smudges held hints of the old picture, but space opened for whatever came next. In that blur, I saw possibility—not chaos, but quiet invitation. Demarking invites us to live lighter, one line at a time. *_On this day in 2026, may your hand find the fog._*