# The Garden After Frost ## When the Bloom Fades In the hush of early spring 2026, I walk my small garden and find the first frost-killed leaves scattered on the soil. Postmortem.md feels like this moment—a deliberate pause after something vital has ended. Not a grim autopsy, but a tender review. We lose projects, relationships, even dreams, and in that quiet, we gather the remnants. It's not about blame; it's about seeing clearly what was. ## Tracing the Roots Kneeling down, I turn the soil with care. Here, a root that choked the growth; there, sunlight missed because of crowding stems. Life's postmortems work the same way. We note: - Moments of neglect that weakened the whole. - Small joys that sustained it longer than expected. - Patterns that whisper of better ways ahead. This isn't dissection for its own sake. It's mapping the hidden paths—the why of the wilt—to understand the plant's true nature. In my hands, the dead matter softens, revealing nutrients held within. ## Soil for New Shoots What felt like loss becomes fertile ground. Those reviewed leaves will feed the seeds I plant tomorrow. Postmortems teach us this: endings aren't erasures. They enrich. A failed venture shows clearer steps for the next. A ended bond reveals what we truly need in love. By April 7th, 2026, as the earth warms, I see green tips pushing through—not despite the frost, but because of it. *Every quiet examination plants the unseen seed of renewal.*