By the Time You Call It Now, It Is Already Gone
I keep trying to arrive in the present. I tell myself to slow down. To breathe. To notice the room, the light, the sound of my own life happening around me. But the moment I think, This is now, that moment has already passed. The breath I noticed is already leaving. The sound has faded. The light has shifted. Even the thought I used to name the present belongs to the past by the time I hear it inside my head. So what are we actually living in? Most days, I seem to live between two places that do not exist anymore—or do not exist yet. I replay what happened. I rehearse what might happen. I return to old conversations and build imaginary ones. Meanwhile, the present slips quietly through without asking to be understood. Maybe now was never something we were meant to capture. Maybe it cannot be held still long enough to examine. Maybe the moment we try to pin it down, we turn it into a memory. The present may not be a place we reach through thought. It may be the warmth of the cup before...