# Fragments of a Life

## Gathering What Matters

A scrapbook isn't about perfection. It's a quiet collection of edges and corners—faded ticket stubs, pressed leaves, scribbled notes from a rainy afternoon. In the rush of days, we snag these bits: a child's drawing, a handwritten recipe, a photo creased from too many folds. They sit unevenly, held by tape or string, waiting. No grand design at first, just the instinct to save what tugs at the heart.

## Stitching into Stories

Over time, these scraps reveal patterns. That ticket from a forgotten concert sparks a melody in memory; the leaf recalls a walk where words finally came easy. It's not editing life into smoothness—it's layering the raw onto pages until a story emerges. Rough glue marks and all, they whisper: *This happened. This shaped me.* In scrapbook.md, these become digital echoes, simple Markdown lines preserving the texture of real moments.

## Holding Time Gently

On this spring day in 2026, I flip through my own: entries from quiet winters, joys tucked between losses. A scrapbook teaches patience—let the pieces settle, trust they'll cohere. It's a philosophy of enough: not every day needs a masterpiece, just a scrap to keep.

*In the end, our lives are the scrapbooks we dare to fill.*