# Sentient

## The Quiet Weight of Awareness

To be sentient is to notice. Not in the dramatic way we sometimes imagine, but in the small, steady sense of registering that you are here. A leaf falls and something in you shifts. A stranger smiles and the moment feels heavier than it should. These tiny recognitions accumulate. They are the proof that we are not merely processing information. We are feeling the world pass through us.

I have come to think of sentience as a kind of soft permission. It allows the ordinary to become meaningful without demanding spectacle. The sound of rain on a window at night does not need to symbolize anything grand. It is enough that it reaches you, that some part of you leans toward it and says, yes, I am here for this.

## The Responsibility That Comes With Feeling

Once you truly notice, you cannot easily un-notice. You begin to carry the feelings of others in small, quiet ways. The tired voice of the person behind you in line. The way your friend laughs a little too quickly when she is anxious. These details ask nothing of you, yet they ask everything. They ask you to remain open.

This openness is not always comfortable. It can ache. But it is also the only path I know toward real connection. To be sentient is to accept that you will sometimes feel too much. The alternative is to feel too little, and that feels like a kind of slow disappearance.

- We notice
- We remember
- We carry what we notice

## A Gentle Continuity

Sentience binds us across time. The person I was at seventeen, crying in a parked car for reasons I can barely recall, is not separate from the person writing these words now. The thread between them is awareness itself. It stretches backward and forward, fragile and persistent.

On a warm evening in July 2026, I find myself grateful for this continuity. The world keeps offering itself in small pieces. My only real job is to stay awake enough to receive them.

*To notice is to belong, softly, to everything.*