# The End Is Also a Beginning ## What We Leave Behind When a project dies, we call the record a postmortem. The name itself suggests looking at a body after life has left it. Yet the more I sit with that idea, the gentler it feels. A postmortem is not really about death. It is about care. Someone took the time to examine what happened, to understand, to learn. In that way the act of writing a postmortem becomes an act of respect for the time and effort that came before. ## The Space Between There is a quiet room that exists after something ends and before the next thing begins. Most of us rush through it. We want to move on, to ship the next feature, to prove we have already recovered. But the best postmortems happen when we stay in that room a little longer. We let the silence speak. We notice what we ignored while we were busy. We see the small decisions that snowballed. We remember the people who stayed late and the ones who tried to warn us. ## Learning to Let Go A good postmortem does not assign blame. It simply tells the truth in plain language. This is what we saw. This is what we missed. This is what we now understand. There is humility in that honesty, and there is freedom too. Once the story is written down, we no longer have to carry it in our heads. The past has been given its proper place. We can stand up, stretch, and walk into the next room lighter than we came. *Some endings are the kindest gifts we give to what comes next.*