# Theorems in Plain Text

## Building from the Ground Up

A theorem begins with simple truths—facts so basic they need no proof. From there, each step connects logically, layer by layer, until something solid emerges. It's not magic; it's patient assembly. In a world of noise, this feels like a quiet anchor: start small, trust the process, and watch certainty form.

## The Clarity of Markdown

Markdown strips away the fancy. Bold where it matters, lists for order, headings to guide. No distractions, just words doing their work. It's how we share theorems now—not in dusty books, but in open files anyone can read and build on. This simplicity reminds us: truth doesn't need polish to endure.

## Proving Our Own Lives

We live as our own mathematicians. Daily choices are axioms; years of trying, the proofs. A friendship that lasts, a habit that sticks, a lesson hard-won—these become our theorems. On a morning in 2026, staring at a screen, I see it: our stories, too, deserve plain text. Shared not for applause, but quiet recognition.

*In the end, every life is a theorem waiting to be lived.*