# Demarking the Divide

## Lines in the Sand

We draw lines everywhere. Around our yards, between our ideas, across our differences. A fence keeps neighbors apart. A label sorts friends from strangers. These marks feel safe, like borders on a map that promise order. But over time, they harden. What starts as a sketch becomes a wall, blocking the view of what's on the other side. I've watched it in small ways—a disagreement at dinner turning into weeks of silence, or a playground spat where kids pick teams and forget why.

## The Quiet Act of Erasure

Demarking isn't destruction; it's a gentle wipe. Imagine a foggy window: your finger traces a heart, then smears it away, revealing the garden beyond. No tools needed, just willingness. Start small. Erase "us versus them" from a conversation. Let go of the score in an old argument. In my own life, I once held a grudge like a permanent ink stain. One rainy afternoon, I chose to demark it—not by forgetting, but by seeing the person beneath. What emerged was understanding, soft and unexpected.

## What Lies Beneath

Without the marks, space opens. Connections form where lines once stood. It's not naive; it's honest. We find shared ground—laughter over coffee, hands joined in quiet support. Demarking reveals the plain truth: we're more alike than divided.

- A smile across a crowded room.
- Soil turned fresh for new seeds.
- Breath shared in stillness.

*On April 9, 2026, I demark to see clearly.*