The Velocity of Small Things
In the physics of childhood, momentum is rarely a straight line. It is a series of erratic, joyous arcs, a constant negotiation between the pull of the earth and the sudden, inexplicable urge to defy it. We spend our adult lives trying to measure progress in miles or milestones, yet the most significant movements often happen in the span of a single breath, across a patch of ground that seems entirely unremarkable to anyone else. There is a specific, frantic grace in the way a small body moves through a field—not toward a destination, but simply because the air is there to be pushed aside. It is a form of prayer, I think, this unburdened running. It asks for nothing, expects nothing, and leaves no map behind. We watch from the periphery, tethered by our own gravity, wondering if we ever moved with such absolute, unthinking purpose, or if we have always been merely walking toward the next thing. What is it that we are actually chasing when we finally decide to let go of the path?

Shahnaz Parvin has captured this fleeting energy in her beautiful image titled Make a Run. It serves as a gentle reminder of the wild, golden momentum that lives in the quiet corners of our world. Does this scene stir a memory of a time when you, too, ran without knowing why?


