# Demarking the Lines ## The Invisible Boundaries We spend our days drawing lines. Not with pencils, but with thoughts. This person is different from me. That memory stains the present. These worries mark tomorrow as heavy. These lines feel real, keeping us safe or separate. They shape how we see the world, turning openness into compartments. But what if those marks were just temporary sketches on a vast canvas? ## The Quiet Act of Erasure Demarking starts small. Notice a judgment rising—like labeling a stranger as unkind—and gently wipe it away. Feel the tightness of an old grudge and let it fade without force. It's not forgetting; it's uncluttering. Like smoothing sand after footprints, the surface reveals its natural flow. In this space, connections emerge unbidden. A conversation flows deeper. A walk feels lighter. Boundaries dissolve, not through effort, but release. ## Everyday Unmarking - Pause before assigning blame; ask what fades when you don't. - Breathe into grudges until they blur like morning mist. - Meet each moment fresh, unmarked by yesterday. Living this way isn't perfection. Marks reappear, as they must. The practice lies in the soft erasure, day by day. On this spring evening in 2026, with the world still spinning its divides, demarking invites a simpler truth: beneath the lines, everything touches. *In the unmarked moment, we are already whole.*