# Life's Quiet Scrapbook ## Collecting the Fragments Every life is a scrapbook, filled not with grand adventures but ordinary scraps. A faded receipt from a rainy coffee run. A child's crayon drawing tucked in a drawer. A photo snapped on a walk, capturing light through leaves. These bits arrive unbidden, like leaves falling in autumn. We gather them because they hold the texture of being alive—soft edges, creases from handling, colors that shift with time. ## Arranging with Gentle Hands Pasting them down takes care. No need for symmetry or theme; the beauty lies in the flow. One page might hold a birthday card next to a grocery list, reminding us joy hides beside the mundane. It's a quiet act of curation, deciding what stays. Some scraps fade or tear, but that's the point—they mark passages, losses turned tender through touch. ## The Whole in the Pieces A scrapbook isn't finished; it's ongoing, pages added as years unfold. It teaches us meaning emerges not from perfection but presence. In its pages, chaos becomes story, fragments form a self. We see patterns we missed: kindness repeated, small risks that grew into paths. *May 5, 2026—today's scrap joins the rest, held forever in the turning.*