# The Quiet Work of Digestion ## What We Take In Every day we consume more than food. We swallow headlines, conversations, worries, memories, and half-formed ideas. Most of it passes through us without notice. The body, and the mind, have their own mysterious intelligence. They decide what stays, what nourishes, and what must be let go. The name *digest.md* reminds me that this sorting is not dramatic. It happens in silence, below awareness, the way roots draw what they need from dark soil. We rarely praise the stomach or the quiet hours of reflection that turn experience into understanding. Yet without them we would choke on our own intake. ## The Patience of Processing Real digestion cannot be rushed. Sit with a difficult truth too soon and it sours. Share a joy before it has settled and it loses its depth. The best insights arrive only after we have stopped forcing them, when we have given the mind time to break things down in its own rhythm. I have learned to trust the slow intervals. An argument that stung last month now feels like a small lesson. A book I barely understood at twenty makes gentle sense at thirty-five. These changes do not announce themselves. They simply appear one morning, already part of me, the way nutrients quietly become bone and blood. ## Letting Go Not everything is meant to remain. The body expels what it cannot use without apology or drama. We could learn that grace. Some conversations, some old versions of ourselves, some fears we have carried for years, need to be released so that newer, lighter things can find room. - A kind word remembered years later - The scent of rain on warm pavement - The sudden ease that follows a good cry These are what stays after the rest has passed through. *On a warm July evening in 2026, may we all digest our days with care.*