# The Mark We Leave ## What a Mark Is A mark is not loud. It does not need to be large. It is simply the place where something touched something else and left a trace. A thumbprint on glass. The faint line a pencil makes when it rests too long on paper. The way a chair leg presses into an old wooden floor over years of quiet evenings. On a site called demark.md I keep thinking about this. To *de-mark* might mean to remove a mark, but it also invites us to notice the marks that are already there. The ones we almost miss. ## The Marks We Cannot See Most days we move through the world without thinking about the small impressions we leave. A smile given to a tired cashier. The patience shown while waiting for an elderly neighbor to cross the street. The careful way we close a door so it does not wake a sleeping child. These are not written in stone or saved in cloud storage. They exist only in memory and feeling. Yet they matter. They accumulate. They become the atmosphere of a life, of a family, of a neighborhood. The soft marks that shape how safe or how lonely someone feels. ## A Quiet Practice I have started paying attention on purpose. When I catch myself rushing, I slow down and ask what mark I am about to leave. When I feel the urge to criticize, I pause and consider what mark I want to remain after I speak. The practice is simple. It asks only for presence. Some days I fail. The mark left is sharper than I intended. On those days I try to leave a gentler one soon after, the way a careful hand smooths a wrinkled page. *In the end we are all just marks passing through, hoping the ones we leave are kind.*