Watching the Clouds
Some days it’s enough just to watch the clouds. They drift slowly across the sky, reshaping themselves without hurry—mountains one moment, islands the next. A long white ridge becomes a drifting ship, then dissolves into nothing at all. Nothing about them lasts very long, and yet the sky never seems to run out of them. Clouds remind us that change doesn’t always have to be dramatic. Sometimes it happens quietly, almost without notice. A shape softens. An edge thins. The wind carries it somewhere else. The sky keeps moving, but so gently that you could miss it if you weren’t paying attention. The philosopher Heraclitus wrote, “Everything flows.” Clouds may be the simplest proof of that. They move. They dissolve. They return. And if you watch them long enough, something inside you begins to slow down as well. The mind loosens. Thoughts drift the way the clouds drift. Problems that felt heavy begin to feel lighter in the wide blue above you. Sometimes the world doesn’t need explaini...








