# The Gentle Autopsy ## Seeing Clearly After A postmortem isn't cold dissection. It's sitting quietly with what's finished—a relationship, a dream, a day—and asking what it taught. Like sunlight filtering through bare branches after autumn, endings strip away the rush. We see the shape of things: the roots that held strong, the leaves that fell too soon. No judgment, just honest light. In life, we rush past closures. But pausing here, in this .md space for reflections, turns loss into map. What nourished? What drained? Simple questions, like checking a garden after frost. ## A Ritual for the Living Try it small. After a tough week: - Note three truths: one joy, one ache, one surprise. - Let them sit, no fixing. - Carry one forward, lightly. This isn't therapy or analysis. It's tending the heart like old letters in a drawer—touch them, learn, then close it. Over time, patterns emerge. Fears loosen. Gratitude roots deeper. ## Echoes into Tomorrow Postmortems honor the dead parts of us, making room for green shoots. They're not about perfection, but presence. In 2026, amid whatever storms, this practice whispers: every end holds a seed. *What if every goodbye was a quiet teacher?*