# Anthology of Small Things

## The Quiet Shelf

An anthology is nothing more than a shelf where someone decided certain moments deserved to stay together. The word itself comes from gathering flowers, yet what we gather most often are fragments of ordinary life: a sentence that stayed with us, a memory that refuses to fade, a short silence between two people who understood each other without speaking.

I have come to think of my own mind as an anthology that keeps rewriting itself. Each year new pages slip in, some old ones yellow and curl at the edges. The binding is loose. That is not a flaw. It is the nature of any honest collection.

## What Belongs

Not everything makes it into the final volume. The nights we spent worrying about things that never happened, the sharp words we wish we could take back, those rarely earn a place. What remains are usually smaller than we expect: the way my grandmother folded towels, the particular hush that falls over a city street at dawn, the steady sound of my daughter learning to read aloud.

These pieces do not shout for attention. They wait patiently until we are quiet enough to notice them again. Then they fit together in ways we could not have planned.

- A remembered laugh
- The smell of rain on warm pavement
- One perfect sentence from a letter written in 1997

## The Reader Returns

On a warm July evening in 2026 I sat on the porch watching fireflies rise from the grass like tiny moving stars. For a moment the whole scattered story of my life felt gently held. Nothing was solved. Everything was simply gathered.

The anthology does not promise wisdom or triumph. It only says: these things happened, these things mattered, these things are still worth keeping.

*Some shelves are built not to impress guests, but to keep good company on ordinary nights.*