# Scraps That Stick

## Everyday Fragments

Life hands us scraps: a faded ticket stub from a rainy concert, a scribbled note from a friend, a pressed leaf from a walk. These aren't grand chapters but quiet pieces that pile up in drawers or phone folders. On scrapbook.md, they find a home—not polished albums, but simple pages where edges overlap and glue shows. In 2026, with screens everywhere, we still crave this: holding fragments that feel real, unfiltered by algorithms.

## Pasting Without Perfection

Assembling a scrapbook means no eraser, no redo. You cut, fold, stick what fits, letting some tears stay. Markdown's plain lines mirror this—bold a word here, italicize a feeling there, and the story emerges. It's patient work, turning chaos into flow. I once taped my grandmother's recipe card beside a photo of her hands; the ink smudged, but it captured her more than any scan could. These acts remind us: meaning hides in the mess, not the frame.

## A Narrative Unfolds

Over time, the book thickens. Patterns appear—a thread of kindness through losses, joys in small routines. Scrapbook.md isn't about completeness; it's permission to add as we live, revisiting to see growth. We don't need flawless pages; the philosophy is simple: collect sincerely, arrange gently, and let the whole tell itself.

*In our digital age, the truest stories are the ones we piece together by hand.*