# The Quiet Record

## What Remains

Incidents.md holds the small collisions of a life. Not the grand disasters, just the moments when plans met reality and something shifted. A missed train. A forgotten name. The email sent too soon. These entries are not failures. They are evidence that we were here, trying.

I have come to see each incident as a kind of quiet teacher. It arrives without ceremony, shows me where I was careless or kind or afraid, then leaves me to decide what to carry forward. The file grows slowly, like rings in a tree. Nothing dramatic. Only steady proof of time passed and attention paid.

## The Space Between

There is comfort in keeping these records. Not because they prevent future mistakes, but because they remind me that mistakes are ordinary. Expected. Human. When I review the list on quiet evenings, I notice how few incidents truly mattered after a week or a month. Most dissolved. What remained was the way I responded, or failed to respond, with grace.

The simple act of writing them down changes the story. An incident stops being something that happened to me and becomes something I met, considered, and placed gently in the archive. The file itself becomes a modest form of mercy.

## One Small Habit

- A short note written before sleep
- An honest sentence, no excuses
- The decision to remember instead of hide

These small practices turn the ordinary mess of living into something bearable, even meaningful.

*Some truths only become clear once they are written down and left to rest.*