# The Quiet Art of Collection

## What We Choose to Keep

An anthology is never random. Each piece earns its place through resonance, through the way it speaks to something larger when set beside its neighbors. The word itself carries this gentle insistence: we do not simply gather. We choose. We arrange. We create conversation between things that might never have met.

In 2026, when so much arrives in endless streams, the act of making an anthology feels almost radical. It says that some moments, some thoughts, some fragments of beauty or truth deserve to be lifted out of the current and given a home. They deserve neighbors. They deserve time.

## The Space Between

There is a particular pleasure in the gaps. Between one poem and the next, between one story and another, something invisible happens. The silence does its own work. A good anthology trusts this silence. It leaves room for the reader to enter and complete the meaning.

This is perhaps its deepest lesson. Our lives are anthologies too. We are not the sum of every experience that passes through us, but the careful collection of what we decide to carry forward. The rest, we let dissolve.

## A Gentle Inheritance

My grandmother kept a small wooden box of buttons. Not valuable ones. Just buttons that had come off coats and shirts over decades of ordinary days. When I was small she would let me pour them onto the table and we would sort them by color, by size, by the stories she remembered about the garments they once belonged to.

I understand now that she was teaching me how to make an anthology. How to look at scattered pieces and see the possibility of pattern. How to honor small things by giving them context and company.

*In the end, we become the curators of our own becoming.*