May 24, 2026
They tried to bury us. They didn't know we were seeds.
Rigoberta Menchú spoke from the middle of one of the most brutal periods of state violence in Guatemalan history, having lost her brother, her father, and her mother to military repression. Her people, the K'iche' Maya, were being systematically destroyed, and the world was mostly not paying attention. She did not speak from a place of safety or distance — she spoke from inside it, insisting that survival itself was an act of presence. That insistence on being here, alive, and continuing is exactly what present-moment awareness looks like when the stakes are real.
Reflection
Think about something in your life right now that you are waiting to get past. What are you refusing to be present for today?
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