The Witness in the Weeds
It is 3:15 am, and the house is holding its breath. In this hollow space, I think about the things that watch us without ever speaking. We walk through our lives convinced we are the protagonists, the ones who notice, the ones who interpret. But there is a quiet, wild periphery that sees us in our most unguarded moments. It is a gaze that asks for nothing and offers no judgment. It simply exists, anchored in the shadows, waiting for the noise of our human urgency to subside. We are so loud, so desperate to be seen, yet there is a profound dignity in the creature that remains hidden until it chooses to be known. It makes me wonder what parts of myself I have kept in the thicket, hidden away from the harsh glare of the sun, waiting for a silence deep enough to finally step out. Does the watcher ever tire of the view?

Saniar Rahman Rahul has captured this quiet grace in his photograph titled Spotted Deer in the Sundarbans. It serves as a reminder of the eyes that watch from the edge of our own awareness. Does this stillness make you feel seen, or merely observed?

The Old Man's Contemplation by Karthick Saravanan
Visiting grandma by Arnaud Vlaminck