19/05/2026
One of my friends recently became part of the preparation team for a large event. Through that experience, she came to a beautiful realization about life itself.
Before the event began, there were endless tensions, creativity, disagreements, compromises, stress, laughter, peace, and drama. Everyone poured their energy into making something meaningful. Yet during the preparation stage, none of it seemed complete or even fully understandable. Only when the event finally began did everything suddenly make sense. In that moment, all the exhaustion felt worthwhile, and there was a deep sense of relief—as if a long-carried burden had finally been released.
What was once an empty and abandoned space slowly transformed into something alive. Ideas arose from nothing. Thoughts became plans, plans became action, and action became a beautiful experience shared by many people. The room was filled with lights, flowers, art, conversations, appreciation, and joy. People entered, admired the effort, offered praise, and created memories together.
But once the event ended, another process immediately began: dismantling everything. The decorations were removed one by one, the seating arrangements disappeared, the flowers faded, and the excitement dissolved into silence. The same room that had once felt vibrant and meaningful gradually returned to emptiness. After the final cleanup, the lights were switched off, and everyone walked away carrying another kind of relief—mixed with sadness, tiredness, and completion.
It felt like watching a living sand mandala. A sand mandala begins with emptiness, becomes a masterpiece through patience and intention, and is eventually swept away back into nothingness. Yet the beauty was never meaningless because of its impermanence. In fact, its impermanence is what made it sacred.
This is exactly the nature of all phenomena. Everything we consider precious, solid, or lasting exists together with impermanence and emptiness. Nothing remains fixed. From a blank space, thoughts arise; from thoughts, something is created; and eventually, that “something” changes, fades, and disappears again. Even memories slowly dissolve with time.
Meeting and departing are also co-emergent. If we never met, there could be no separation. In every encounter, we exchange something invisible—memories, lessons, emotions, wounds, joy, understanding. Between meeting and parting, life unfolds with its endless dramas, laughter, confusion, beauty, and realizations.
The important lesson is this: life itself is a continuous journey from nothing to something, and from something back to nothing. When we deeply understand this, we learn not to cling too tightly to success, failure, praise, criticism, beauty, or sorrow. Instead, we begin to appreciate each moment fully while it appears, knowing it is temporary, precious, and inseparable from change.