The Weight of Small Things
We often speak of the world as if it were a grand, sweeping tapestry, something to be viewed from a great height. We look for the mountain ranges, the shifting tides, the migrations of entire species. Yet, there is a quiet, insistent truth in the miniature. If you sit long enough in a garden, the scale of your own existence begins to shift. You notice the way a single stem bows under the weight of a visitor, or how the light catches the curve of a petal that would otherwise go unnoticed in the rush of a day. It is a humbling exercise, this narrowing of focus. It suggests that importance is not a matter of size, but of presence. When we stop looking for the horizon and start looking at the architecture of a single bloom, we find that the universe is not just out there, somewhere in the distance. It is right here, resting on a leaf, waiting for us to slow down enough to notice. What happens to our own sense of urgency when we finally decide to stand still?

Tisha Clinkenbeard has captured this stillness in her beautiful image titled Ladybug and a Daisy. It serves as a gentle reminder that the most profound stories are often the ones unfolding at our very feet. Will you take a moment today to look for the small wonders hiding in plain sight?


