# The Quiet Work of Digestion

## What We Take In

Every day we consume. Food, words, experiences, arguments, silence, sunlight. Most of it slips past our attention. We rarely pause to notice what our minds and bodies choose to keep and what they quietly release. The name *digest.md* reminds me that meaning often arrives not in the moment of intake, but in the patient hours that follow.

## The Patient Process

True digestion asks for time and stillness. It happens in the background while we walk, sleep, or stare out a window. What survives this unseen labor becomes part of us. The rest, even if it once felt urgent or important, drifts away without ceremony. There is humility in this. We are not in full control of what finally nourishes us.

I have begun to trust the slow filter. A conversation that stung last month now feels like simple data. A book I barely remember reading surfaces months later with a single clear sentence that answers a question I had not yet asked. The system works best when I stop forcing it.

## Small Daily Practice

- Notice one thing you consumed today without judgment
- Let it sit, unanalyzed, for at least twenty-four hours
- Ask gently what remains

This is not productivity advice. It is a form of respect for the hidden intelligence that turns experience into self.

*In the end we become what we have truly digested.*