# Demarking the Everyday ## Lines We Draw We spend our days drawing lines. Around our homes, our roles, our memories. A fence keeps neighbors at bay. A label pins down who we think we are—parent, worker, friend. These marks feel safe, like borders on a map. But over time, they press in, turning open fields into crowded rooms. On this quiet morning in 2026, I trace one on my hand: a faint scar from a childhood fall. It's a reminder, but also a limit. ## The Gentle Erase Demarking isn't destruction. It's like lifting pencil from paper, watching strokes fade without tearing the page. Imagine a sketchbook filled with half-formed ideas—crossed-out plans, shaded doubts. With a soft eraser, you reveal the white space beneath. That emptiness invites new lines, lighter ones. In life, it means questioning the boundaries we defend. Let go of "mine" versus "yours." See the stranger as a mirror. The scar? It softens to a story, not a chain. ## Breathing into Space Try it small: - Pause before labeling a moment good or bad. - Step across an old grudge, unmarked. - Sit with silence, no need to fill it. Demarking clears the clutter. Relationships deepen without defenses. Days flow without the drag of old ink. It's not about perfection, but presence—living in the unmarked moment where possibility waits. *Demarking reveals the vastness we share.*