# Demarking the Quiet

## Seeing Without Lines

Life draws lines everywhere. We mark people as friends or strangers, days as good or bad, moments as wins or losses. These marks feel real, like ink on paper, shaping how we move through the world. But what if we softened them? Demarking isn't about erasing everything—it's a quiet step back, noticing the lines we've added and letting some fade. On a morning walk in 2026, with the world still waking under soft March light, I watched dew slip from leaves, unmarked by the sun's first touch. That's demarking: returning to what's simply there.

## A Gentle Habit

It starts small, in the everyday. When tension rises in a conversation, pause and demark the "right" or "wrong." See the person across from you, not the label. Or with a task that drags, release the mark of "must finish now"—breathe, and it lightens.

Try these in quiet moments:
- Name the mark aloud: "I'm calling this failure."
- Wait three breaths.
- Ask: "What if it's just what it is?"

Over time, this builds space. Boundaries blur, not into chaos, but into openness.

## The Peace Beyond

Demarking frees us from self-made walls. Relationships deepen without old scores. Days flow without heavy judgments. It's not perfection—marks return—but each release carves a wider path to presence. In a marked-up world, this simple unmarking feels like coming home.

*In demarking, we find the world—and ourselves—vast and unmarked.*