Salt on the Tongue
The air near the edge of the world tastes of cold iron and crushed shells. It is a sharp, stinging flavor that settles at the back of the throat, thick with the dampness of a coming storm. I remember the feeling of wet sand between my toes—not the soft, yielding kind, but the packed, shivering grit of a beach that has been beaten by the tide for centuries. There is a specific ache in the shoulders when you stand against a wind that refuses to stop, a pressure that pushes you inward, forcing your lungs to expand against the sheer weight of the horizon. We are small, fragile things, yet we build monuments to our own endurance, hoping to stand tall while the water gnaws at our foundations. Does the stone remember the warmth of the sun, or does it only know the relentless, rhythmic hunger of the spray? What remains of us when the tide finally claims the ground we once called home?

Ronnie Glover has captured this enduring spirit in his image titled Lighthouse on the California Coast. The way the structure stands against the vastness of the shore feels like a deep breath held against the wind. Can you feel the salt spray on your skin as you look at it?


