The morning light had barely crept over the horizon when sixty-four-year-old farmer Thomas stepped outside, his boots sinking softly into the damp earth. The rain from the night before had left a silver sheen across the soybean fields, each leaf beaded with droplets that caught the first streaks of sunrise. Low clouds drifted lazily overhead, painted pink and gold, while a faint mist hovered in the shallow dips of land where water tended to gather after heavy storms. For Thomas, this was more than scenery; it was routine. For over four decades, he had begun his days the same way—coffee steaming in a chipped ceramic mug, weathered hat pulled low against the early glare, eyes scanning the acreage that had shaped his entire adult life.
Farming was not merely his occupation; it was his inheritance and identity, passed down from his father and grandfather before him. He understood the soil’s moods, the way certain patches dried faster than others, the subtle color shifts that signaled nutrient deficiencies, and the delicate balance between rain and sun that determined a successful season. Most mornings were predictable, governed by maintenance tasks, irrigation checks, and the steady rhythm of agricultural life.