# What Comes After ## The End of the Page When a system stops, we call it a postmortem. We sit quietly with what happened, not to assign blame, but to understand. The name itself suggests a gentle honesty: something has died, and we owe it our attention. In that quiet space between the failure and the next attempt, a small truth often appears. I have come to see every ending as a small death. A project ends. A season ends. A version of ourselves ends. Each one leaves behind fragments we can examine without panic. The postmortem is not morbid. It is respectful. It says the thing mattered enough to study where it went. ## Learning to Look Back Looking back used to feel like weakness. Now it feels like repair. We rarely see clearly while we are rushing forward. Only after the dust settles can we notice the small choices that quietly shaped the outcome. A missed conversation. An assumption we never questioned. A kindness we forgot to offer. The best postmortems I have read were written with soft voices. They did not hunt for villains. They followed the thread of events with patience, the way you might follow a child’s footprints across wet sand. What they found was almost always simpler than expected: we moved too fast, we stopped listening, we lost the plot. - We protect what we name. - We heal what we understand. - We improve what we refuse to forget. ## A Quiet Practice A postmortem is an act of care. It turns loss into instruction. It honors the work by refusing to repeat the same mistakes. In a world that rushes from one thing to the next, choosing to pause and reflect feels almost radical. The practice does not need to be formal. A notebook page at the end of a hard week can be enough. The important part is the sincerity: the willingness to sit with what is over and ask it, gently, what it wants us to remember. *Some things only speak once they have come to an end.*