# The Quiet Art of Digesting Life

## What It Means to Digest

The word *digest* carries a gentle wisdom. In the body, digestion is not dramatic. It happens slowly, in darkness, without fanfare. The stomach and intestines take what we give them, separate what nourishes from what does not, and turn experience into quiet strength. 

We rarely praise our digestion until it fails. Only then do we notice how much depends on this invisible work. The same is true for our minds and hearts. We consume news, conversations, memories, and feelings all day long. Most of it passes through us half-noticed. A few things stay and become part of who we are.

## The Patient Second Pass

Good digestion requires time and stillness. When we rush, we miss the nutrients. When we refuse to let things settle, we carry unnecessary weight. 

The best thoughts often arrive hours or days after the original moment, the way flavor deepens in a soup left overnight. Understanding rarely comes in the heat of experience. It arrives later, during a quiet walk or while staring at the ceiling at 2 a.m., once the mind has done its patient, unseen work.

- Some experiences we absorb easily and gratefully.
- Others sit heavy until we find the right way to break them down.
- A few things must be let go completely, returned to the world as waste.

## Living with Care

To live thoughtfully is to become a better digester of life. It means choosing what we take in, giving ourselves time to process, and trusting that not every meal needs to be profound. Simple bread and butter, taken with attention, can sustain us for a long time.

*On July 2, 2026, may we all digest our days with kindness toward ourselves.*