# Scraps of a Shared Life

## Gathering What Matters

A scrapbook isn't made of flawless sheets or polished stories. It's built from edges torn from newspapers, faded ticket stubs, pressed flowers from a walk. These are the raw bits of living—moments we snag before they slip away. In 2026, with screens flickering endlessly, we still crave this: picking up fragments of joy, sorrow, the ordinary that feels sacred. It's a quiet act of noticing, like saving a child's drawing or a note from a friend.

## Pasting Without Perfection

No need for symmetry here. Glue a photo crookedly next to a scribbled recipe; let the colors bleed a little. This mirrors how we assemble our days—not in straight lines, but in overlaps and creases. Each paste-down holds a choice: what to keep close, what to layer over old hurts. It's patient work, turning chaos into something yours, a narrative that bends but doesn't break.

## Unfolding Over Time

Open the book years later, and the scraps breathe again. A concert stub recalls laughter with someone gone; a leaf evokes a rainy afternoon hike. They don't demand explanation—they simply remind us that life accumulates in whispers, not shouts.

- A smile shared at dawn.
- A hand held through doubt.
- Silence savored in the garden.

In this digital scrapbook, we preserve the tactile soul of being human.

*Every page turned is a gentle return home.*