# Echoes in Plain Text ## The Quiet After On this spring morning in 2026, I sit with a cup of tea, staring at the blank page of postmortem.md. The name stirs something gentle—a reminder that every chapter closes before the next opens. Not with finality, but with invitation. We've all known endings: a job lost, a friendship faded, a dream set aside. Postmortem isn't about blame or autopsy under harsh lights. It's the soft breath afterward, where we sift through what was, not to dwell, but to see clearly. In software, a postmortem follows a crash—teams gather, note what broke, and rebuild stronger. Life mirrors this. After my own quiet failure last year—a book unwritten, pages gathering dust—I traced the path backward. No judgment, just honest notes: too many distractions, not enough quiet hours. The exercise didn't erase the loss; it honored it. ## Writing What Remains Markdown suits this perfectly. Plain text, no frills. Just words in lines, like thoughts laid bare on a kitchen table. - What worked: the small daily steps. - What didn't: ignoring rest. - What next: one page at a time. Here, reflection becomes portable, enduring. Postmortem.md becomes a philosophy: examine gently, learn deeply, carry forward lightly. It's not philosophy in grand terms, but a daily rhythm—endings as teachers, not tyrants. ## Toward New Dawn This practice turns endings into soil for growth. What dies feeds what lives. *In the space after, wisdom takes root.*