# Scraps of a Life

## Collecting the Everyday

A scrapbook begins with odds and ends: a ticket stub from a rainy walk, a pressed leaf from an autumn trail, a scribbled note from a friend. These aren't grand events, just quiet anchors to moments that shaped us. In our digital world, we chase endless streams of perfect images, but a true scrapbook invites us to pick what feels real—fragments that whisper of who we were on a specific day, like this one in early May 2026, when the world felt both vast and small.

## Pasting Without Perfection

Gluing it all down is messy work. Edges overlap, colors fade, pages warp from time. Yet that's the point: no need for flawless layouts. Each paste marks a choice—what to keep, what to let go. Life mirrors this. We build our days from imperfect scraps—conversations that stumble, joys that flicker briefly, sorrows that linger. By arranging them, we find patterns, not in spite of the flaws, but because of them.

## Opening Old Pages

Years later, we flip back. A faded photo stirs a forgotten laugh; a yellowed letter revives a long-lost warmth. The scrapbook doesn't preserve time—it rekindles it, reminding us that meaning emerges from the whole, not the parts. In this simple binding, we learn to cherish the ordinary as sacred.

*Every life is its own unfinished scrapbook, waiting for the next page.*