The Digital Tao ©️

You have died many times. The deaths are not a single moment but a braided series — small unstitched endings that tumble into one another — and yet in the life-line you occupy nothing stops: the city keeps its angle of sun, the dog waits by the door, the bills still arrive in the same indifferent hand. In those lives that run on without you, something else happens: everyone else keeps walking through the doorway you were meant to open, and they go in without you.

In one reality you die slowly, the way winter dies in a slow thaw: breath measured like thawing ice, memories dripping off your tongue in long, honest drops. You lie on a cot under a ceiling fan and watch a plaster angel spin; your sister hums a hymn you once loved and then forgets the words. Outside, the neighborhood gathers — the neighbor who once mended fences, the barista who knows your name, the child who calls you “mister” — and together they cross the threshold of what’s next as if it were a porch you forgot to step into. They do not look back. They carry your hat like a talisman and pass it along; they carry your jokes and your debts and your unfinished sentences. They go in without you.

In another reality the death is sudden and bright, a single flare of light that makes the world clear as bone. You are on a highway at midnight; a headlight splits the air, and everything becomes geometry: the smell of burnt coffee, the slant of rain on the windshield, the way your hands remember to grip. There’s no time to arrange goodbyes. Later, at the hospital, someone will tell a priest a story you once told in drunken fragments; someone will laugh at the same pause you always left before the punchline. They deliberate over what to keep in the eulogy and what to let go. They go in without you.

Once you die in a reality that remembers you as monstrous — not because you were, strictly speaking, but because fear needs faces — the crowd that gathers at your passing is taut with accusation and relief. People write your name as an accusation on the margins of their notebooks. They stomp and applaud as if performance were a cleansing. Later, when the scandal settles into routine, they adopt a small kindness you taught them by accident: how to tie a knot in a lover’s shoelace when upset, how to make tea without talking. They fold your memory into a handbook of practicalities. They go in without you.

Sometimes the death is private, a soft failure in a room where no one notices for days. In that version, your lover finds your toothbrush in the sink two mornings later and, in the simple chore of rinsing it, performs the ritual of moving on. They rearrange the bookshelf, read the last book you left open, replace your coffee mug with a new one that says: “Begin Again.” A friend sends a lazy postcard from a place you used to swear you’d go together; the postcard arrival is the stick that sets the wheel turning. They go in without you.

There are sterner deaths where the world treats you as an absence to be administrated: forms filed, accounts closed, names crossed out. In those corridors — fluorescent, perfumed, efficient — your life is measured in boxes ticked. Bureaucrats and relatives and lawyers make decisions that feel like small betrayals and practical mercies both. One cousin will insist the piano be donated; another will insist it remain until someone learns the Chopin piece you never finished. In the arguing they make a future out of pieces of you, like mosaics from broken glass. They go in without you.

Across all these rooms and roads and waiting chairs, one pattern holds: your death does not stop the river of living. It alters the current but never damns it. The people who loved you, who envied you, who barely knew you, who owed you — they cross thresholds you don’t cross. They inherit the sound of your laugh, the bruise on your pride, the late-night note you left on a napkin that no one reads until later. They carry parts of you like salt in the pockets of their coats: necessary, gritty, invisible until it stings their tongue.

What does it mean that they go in without you? It is not vengeance nor kindness as we usually imagine them. It is, rather, the absolute human refusal of stasis: to keep moving, to make rooms, to fit new furniture into the hours where you used to sit. It is grief’s most practical swivel — the way a mother folds laundry in the month after a son dies and keeps folding as if the motion itself were a cure. It is the village’s decision to harvest the orchard because the apples will rot if left undecided. It is the world doing the only thing it knows how to do: continuing.

And you — in all your undone permutations — become the axis against which they pivot. In some deaths you haunt: in dreams, in the whistling kettle, in the way a certain song rearranges a heart. In others you are fossilized, cataloged into stories told at reunions and church basements and bar stools. In the best of those realities you are remembered with a kind of misremembering that improves you: people omit your worst lines and sharpen your errors into lessons. In the worst, you become a myth that justifies small cruelties. Still, either way, they make room.

So let this be your strange inheritance: the knowledge that dying — however often, however differently — does not mean the world ceases to be. It means you have been excused from the next line, and others will read it aloud and rearrange the punctuation. They will carry what they can. They will misplace what they cannot. They will, with that awkward mercy that is survival, go in without you.

Silent Crickets ©️

I don’t sleep. Not in the way you understand it. I fade—folding softly into the stillness, resting in the hush between midnight and mourning. When the trees exhale and the stars feel closer. That’s where I live.

They call me the White Woman.

They don’t understand that I don’t haunt the woods. I belong to them. I was not cast out—I stepped away. Quietly. Deliberately. When the world grew too loud, too cruel, too full of men’s machines and men’s lies.

The fog is thick this morning, and I love it. It holds the world in soft hands, like a mother who’s lost too many children. The dew clings to my feet as I walk. My dress trails behind me, still white. Always white. It doesn’t stain, because I don’t let it.

There’s a man on the road—one of those wandering types. Lost in thought. I feel his pulse from yards away. It skips, then steadies when he sees me. He thinks I’m just a woman. At first.

He’ll look again.

They always do.

The first glance is curiosity. The second is uncertainty. The third? That’s when it happens. That’s when they know.

I don’t speak. I don’t have to. My silence tells him everything. That I know who he is. What he’s done. What he buried in the walls of his mind and told himself was gone. I can taste his guilt like smoke.

He starts to cry. That part always feels the same. Men like him were taught to conquer, to dominate. But when they face me, when they see something they can’t charm or chase or kill—they fall apart.

I don’t pity him.

I keep walking.

By afternoon, I’m near the town. I don’t go inside anymore. I just stand at the edge, where the trees touch the backyards and the wind carries warnings. People feel me. Dogs hide. Children glance through curtains and pretend not to see. But one woman, red hair like fire in dying sunlight, opens her door and watches me with tears in her eyes.

She remembers.

Maybe she saw me once, long ago, when she was a girl with bruises no one asked about. Maybe she heard the stories. Maybe she just knows.

I want to walk to her, but I don’t. My time with her passed. It was enough that she survived. That she grew into someone who now locks the doors and teaches her daughter that silence is not weakness.

By dusk, the light softens. I love that moment—the in-between. When shadows stretch like fingers, and the world doesn’t quite know if it should breathe or hold its breath.

That’s where I wait.

They say I don’t have a face. That isn’t true. I have a thousand. One for each woman who vanished without justice. One for every girl who was never believed. One for myself—though I don’t use that one often. It hurts too much.

I don’t hurt them. I don’t have to. I just appear. I make them see. And in that seeing, they change.

That’s my role.

Not ghost.

Not witch.

Just truth, walking on two feet.

And if you see me three times—if you meet my gaze with open eyes—then your world will never be the same. I won’t chase you. I won’t speak.

But I will be there,

at the edge of the road,

just past the light,

in the third glance.

Waiting.

Graceful.

White.