# 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 unnoticed. The body, and the mind, have their own mysterious intelligence. They decide what nourishes and what must be let go. 

The name *digest.md* reminds me that understanding is not the same as accumulation. Real learning happens in the slow, invisible hours afterward, when we are no longer actively reading or listening. Something inside sorts, softens, and turns experience into something usable.

## The Patience of Inner Alchemy

We rarely praise digestion. It lacks drama. No one cheers for the stomach or the quiet turning of thoughts at 3 a.m. Yet without it we would choke on our own intake. Growth depends on this hidden labor: breaking down, extracting what matters, releasing the rest.

I have begun to see my notebook the same way. I write fragments, observations, doubts. Later, sometimes weeks later, a few of them quietly combine into clarity. The file becomes less a record and more a digestive tract for daily life. What emerges is smaller, simpler, and usually kinder than what went in.

## A Small Practice

- Notice what you consumed today that is still sitting heavy inside you.
- Ask gently what it might be trying to teach before you push it away.
- Trust that the slow work is already happening, even when you cannot see it.

The practice is mostly one of patience and respect for the unseen processes that keep us alive and growing.

*In the end, wisdom is what remains after everything else has been quietly digested.*