# Fragments Bound in Time

## Echoes of Hands and Glue

A scrapbook isn't a book you read cover to cover. It's a quiet archive of life's edges—faded ticket stubs, pressed flowers, scribbled notes from rainy afternoons. My grandmother kept one, its pages thick with yellowed newsprint and photos curled at the corners. She pasted without perfection, letting overlaps and smudges tell their own stories. In 2026, as screens dominate, I find solace in this analog ritual. It reminds us that meaning hides in the imperfect collection, not the polished whole.

## Markdown's Unadorned Embrace

The ".md" extension feels like a digital nod to that tradition. Markdown strips away flash—no fonts or filters, just plain text that renders true anywhere. It's a scrapbook for the mind, where you drop in thoughts, links, or lists without fanfare:

- A recipe from last week's dinner
- A poem sparked by dawn light
- Quotes that caught your breath

Here, fragments cohere without force, timeless and portable, defying obsolescence.

## The Wisdom of Gathering

This domain whispers a gentle philosophy: life is best preserved in scraps. We don't need grand narratives; small pieces, thoughtfully placed, build a mosaic of who we are. In piecing them, we honor the fleeting—turning chaos into continuity. On this May morning in 2026, I add my own: a walk under blooming cherries, wind carrying petals like confetti.

*What we collect quietly becomes our lasting story.*