# Demarking

## The Lines We Draw

We spend our days drawing lines. Not with pencils, but with thoughts. This person is a stranger; that idea is wrong. We mark successes with gold stars and failures with red ink. These lines keep us safe, or so we think. They define our world, turning the vast into neat boxes. On a quiet morning in 2026, I watched dew erase a path in the grass, and wondered: what if we let some lines fade?

## The Quiet Erase

Demarking starts small. It's noticing a label—"I'm too old for this"—and pausing. No force, just a breath. Watch the mark dissolve like mist. It's forgiving a slight without tallying scores. Or seeing a face without naming its story. No grand ritual. Just hands open, ready to release. In conversations, it means listening past the words we expect. The world softens when we stop etching edges.

## What Emerges

Without marks, space opens. Connections form where walls stood. A walk becomes a discovery, not a route. Joy slips in unannounced, free from judgment. We find ourselves whole, not pieced by categories.

- Pause before naming.
- Breathe into the space.
- Let what is, be.

*In demarking, we uncover the unmarked beauty already here.*