# The Quiet Art of Collection ## What We Choose to Keep An anthology is never about everything. It is about what someone decided mattered enough to gather and preserve. In a world that floods us with words, images, and noise, choosing what belongs together becomes an act of care. Each piece in a collection carries a small, deliberate yes. I have always been moved by how personal an anthology feels. The editor stands quietly behind the pages, saying without saying: these voices speak to one another. These moments belong side by side. The gaps between them matter as much as the words themselves. ## The Space Between There is humility in anthology-making. You cannot include every good thing. You must leave most of it out. That necessary absence gives the chosen pieces room to breathe and speak clearly. The silence around a story can be as meaningful as the story. We do the same with our own lives. We edit memories, keep certain letters, display particular photographs. Our minds become living anthologies, constantly revising what we judge worth carrying forward. The older I get, the more grateful I am for this gentle curation. Not everything deserves to stay. ## A Gentle Inheritance My grandmother kept a small wooden box of poems she had clipped from newspapers over fifty years. Some were yellow and fragile. She would open the box on quiet afternoons and read them aloud, her voice soft with recognition. Those poems were not famous. They were simply ones that had once touched her, and so she kept them safe for the days when she needed to remember how to feel. We are all making anthologies, whether we publish them or not. The question is only whether we choose with intention, patience, and love. *On this midsummer day in 2026, may we keep what truly matters.*