# The End Is Also a Beginning

## What We Leave Behind

When a project dies, we call the record a postmortem. The name itself carries a quiet honesty. Something has ended, and instead of turning away, we sit with it. We look at what happened, not to assign blame, but to understand. In that simple act there is respect for the work that was, and for the people who gave it their time.

Most of us dislike endings. We would rather move on quickly. Yet the postmortem asks us to pause. It creates a small, protected space where failure is allowed to be ordinary instead of shameful. In that space we often discover that the project did not fail completely. Parts of it succeeded. Parts taught us something we will carry into the next thing. The record becomes a gentle bridge between what was and what comes next.

## The Quiet Teacher

A postmortem is less like an autopsy and more like a conversation with an old friend who has decided to move away. You remember the good days, the misunderstandings, the small moments of grace. You speak plainly because there is no longer any reason to pretend.

We learn best when we are not afraid. The postmortem removes some of that fear by making reflection expected, even routine. It turns the messy, human business of trying and falling short into something shared and therefore bearable.

*Even in endings, care can be found.*

*13 July 2026*