what the seed knows

I once kept a plant on a windowsill for so long without any sign of life that I genuinely forgot why I had kept it. The soil had gone pale and compact. I watered it out of something closer to guilt than hope. And then one morning, unremarkably, while I was looking at something else entirely, there was green.

That’s the thing about thresholds. They don’t announce themselves.

I’ve been thinking about the relationship between time and trust. Not as a philosophy, but as a daily practice that most of us are terrible at. We know, somewhere in the back of us, that things shift. That the heavy seasons have always eventually thinned. That we have survived every difficult version of ourselves so far. We know this. And still, in the middle of a long winter, the knowing does almost nothing. The knowledge is there and the comfort is elsewhere, and the distance between them is where most of the suffering lives.

There’s a word in Arabic — sabr — usually translated as patience, but that translation doesn’t quite carry the weight of it. Sabr is closer to steadfastness. It implies an active holding-on, a choosing not to collapse even when collapse would be easier. It is not the patience of someone who is fine. It is the patience of someone who is not fine and is staying anyway.

I think a lot of us are practicing sabr without knowing it has a name. I know I am. Or trying to. Some days I fail it completely.

I lose patience faster than I’d like to admit. When things don’t move, when situations don’t resolve, when the slow burn of difficulty sits in the chest too long, I feel it tip into something sharper. I’ve said things I didn’t mean. I’ve contracted when I wanted to expand. I’ve let the fire in me burn what deserved to be warmed instead. This is not a confession so much as an honest inventory. I am someone who knows the value of stillness and still fidgets. Someone who believes in the long view and still flinches at the short one.

But I think that’s allowed. I think you can hold a beautiful idea and be bad at it. I think the wanting to be better is itself a kind of becoming.

What I’ve noticed, in myself and in people I love, is that waiting for something to change often looks indistinguishable from being stuck. From the outside, and sometimes from the inside too. You can’t always tell if you’re enduring something necessary or prolonging something that should have ended. That uncertainty is its own weight. And no one talks enough about how exhausting it is to simply not know which kind of waiting you’re in.

But flowers don’t know either. The bulb underground in January doesn’t know if the warmth is coming. It just holds its particular form of life in the dark, without evidence, without reassurance, without anyone looking.

Maybe that’s the closest I can get to faith. Not certainty about outcomes, but a willingness to remain in the shape of something that can still bloom.

Grief is strange that way. When you’re inside it, it feels structural, like it is the building now, not something in the building. Like removing it would remove the walls. And so you walk around it carefully, live around it, set your routines around its particular geography. And then one day you realize you’ve stopped navigating around it. It’s still there, maybe, but it’s not the architecture anymore. You don’t remember when that changed. You were looking at something else.

I don’t think this is comfort, exactly. I think it’s just what’s true.

The last thought I can’t stop returning to is the simplest. Gratitude first. Then patience. Then faith. Not as a formula. More like a sequence that reveals itself in hindsight. You look back and think: oh, that’s what those years were. That’s what I was doing without knowing I was doing it.

Gratitude is the hardest to locate when you need it most, which is why I think it has to come first. Not because it’s easy but because it’s the only thing that softens the ground enough for anything else to grow in.

I’m still learning this. Imperfectly, repeatedly, sometimes embarrassingly. But the fact that it still matters to me, that I still want to be someone with more grace in the difficult moments, more steadiness when the heat rises, more room in me for what’s hard, that wanting feels like something. Not arrival. But movement. And maybe that’s enough to keep going with.

The plant on the windowsill is taller now. I don’t know what it’s called. I never looked it up. There’s something I like about that. Tending to something without fully understanding it, and watching it live anyway.

By the way, did you know that I’m actively writing in malayalam also these days. Find them here. I’ve written a small book as well if you’re into that. If you like listening to stuff, do scroll through the selection of podcasts. If you’ve time, have a look at the visuals I’ve made. Grateful for your moment here. Keep coming back here : )