The monk stood alone on the shore of the great lake where land surrendered itself to water without argument. Stones lay half-buried in wet sand, polished smooth by years no one had counted. Reeds bowed in the breeze, then rose again. Far across the vastness, mountains faded into a pale blue haze, as if distance itself had grown tired and dissolved.
The lake moved in small, patient waves.
Each one came forward, touched the shore, and withdrew without regret.
He watched them for what a person might call minutes, or hours, though neither seemed true. The sky brightened, dimmed, brightened again in the shifting of clouds. Shadows changed their angle on the rocks. Birds crossed overhead and were gone. Yet nothing had truly begun, and nothing had ended.
He remembered hearing that time was a thing people made so they could divide what could not be divided. They carved the seamless flow of life into names—morning, noon, yesterday, tomorrow—and then worried themselves over the fragments. They spoke of spending time, saving time, losing time, as though the infinite could be misplaced in a drawer.
But the lake knew nothing of clocks.
The wind did not hurry because evening would come.
The stones did not mourn the centuries that had shaped them.
The clouds did not plan their next form.
All moved within a single unbroken happening.
The monk sat where the water could reach his feet. Cold ripples washed over his ankles and slipped back into themselves. He felt no need to meditate, for there was no distance between attention and the world. The cry of a gull, the scent of wet earth, the touch of wind on his robe, the pulse within his wrist—these were not separate events arriving in sequence. They were facets of the same jewel turning in light.
He tried, briefly, to think of tomorrow.
Nothing appeared.
Only another thought arising now.
He searched for yesterday.
Only memory appearing now.
The mind had built corridors where none existed, endless halls lined with doors labeled past and future. Yet when opened, every door led to the same room—the immediacy of this breath, this wave, this sky.
A stronger wind moved across the lake, darkening its surface in long bands. The water shivered silver where sunlight broke through cloud. The monk smiled.
How strange, he thought, that people feared running out of something that had never existed in the way they imagined. They lived chased by numbers on faces of clocks, driven by calendars, measuring their lives with anxious rulers. Yet the lake had never once been late.
Another wave touched the shore.
Another breath entered and left him.
Neither could be held.
Neither needed to be.
He closed his eyes and listened. Beneath the wind and water was a deeper silence—not emptiness, but fullness without division. In that silence there was no monk standing apart from a lake, no observer counting moments, no self carrying a burden of unfinished hours.
There was only the Tao, moving as water, as wind, as heartbeat, as awareness itself.
When he opened his eyes, the light had changed again.
Or perhaps it had never changed at all.
The great lake stretched before him, timeless because it had never entered time. The shore, the sky, the distant mountains, the one who watched them—all were expressions of the same eternal now, arriving nowhere, leaving nowhere, complete before thought could name it.
