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The Grit of Purpose

The smell of hot asphalt after a summer rain always brings me back to the feeling of being small in a very large place. It is a scent that clings to the back of the throat, metallic and heavy, like the taste of a copper coin held under the tongue. When the world moves too fast, my skin remembers the friction of a crowded sidewalk—the way shoulders brush against one another without apology, a constant, rhythmic rubbing that leaves you feeling polished and worn down all at once. There is a specific ache in the soles of the feet when you have walked for hours, a dull throb that anchors you to the earth even when the noise around you threatens to pull you into the air. We are always looking for a place to set our burdens down, to find a patch of ground that feels like it was waiting just for us. Does the pavement hold the imprint of everyone who has ever stood still upon it?

Searching for Destiny by Jose Juniel Rivera-Negron

Jose Juniel Rivera-Negron has captured this exact weight in his photograph titled Searching for Destiny. It reminds me that even in the loudest, most frantic corners of the world, there is a quiet, steady pulse of human intention. Can you feel the gravity in his steps?