# Demark ## The Quiet Weight of Marks We walk through days collecting marks. A sharp word from a friend leaves a faint scratch. A missed chance etches a line of regret. These are not always visible—scars on skin heal, but the ones inside linger, shaping how we see the world. They define edges: who we trust, what we chase, where we draw lines between safe and uncertain. On this spring evening in 2026, with rain tapping the window, I notice mine again—a hesitation born from old doubts. ## The Simple Release Demarking is not erasure with force. It’s a gentle lift, like peeling damp leaves from a path after a storm. Sit with the mark. Name it without judgment: *This hurt then, but it fades now.* Breathe into it until the edges soften. No grand rituals needed—just the willingness to let go. Yesterday, I demarked a grudge from years back, held against someone long gone. It felt like setting down a stone I’d carried too long. ## A Lighter Horizon When marks loosen, space opens. Colors sharpen; conversations flow without old guards. We connect more fully, not as labeled strangers but as people passing through the same fleeting world. Demarking doesn’t make life perfect—it makes it lighter, more ours. - Pause before reacting to a slight. - Walk without replaying yesterday’s stumbles. - Smile at a stranger, unmarked by assumptions. *In demarking, we find the soft outline of who we might yet be.*