# The Postmortem Garden ## Roots in the Soil Every project ends. A business folds, a relationship fades, a dream slips away. We call it postmortem when we finally turn back, like farmers surveying a spent field. Not to mourn the wilted stalks, but to sift the earth. What nourished the growth? What choked it? In that quiet digging, we uncover patterns—too much rain, poor seed, unseen pests. It's not about blame; it's about understanding the ground beneath our feet. ## Gentle Harvest Reflection feels heavy at first, a weight after the fall. But imagine it as tending a garden after frost. You kneel, hands in cool dirt, pulling weeds without anger. One stubborn root reveals why the tomatoes failed last year. Another shows the spot where flowers thrived. These moments aren't autopsies of death; they're inventories of life. Simple truths emerge: patience matters, soil needs rest, sunlight can't be forced. ## Planting Anew From this, something grows. Not always bigger yields, but wiser ones. A tweak here, a rest there. Life's fields renew each season, and our postmortems ensure the next is kinder. - Listen to the silence first. - Note what worked, without judgment. - Let go of what won't return. On April 3, 2026, as spring stirs, I see it clearly: endings prepare us for beginnings. *What dies teaches us to live.*