Home Reflections The Cartography of Time

The Cartography of Time

We often speak of time as a river, a relentless current that carries us toward a distant sea. But perhaps it is more accurate to view time as a sculptor, working with a chisel that never rests. It does not merely pass over us; it carves into us. Every worry, every winter, every quiet joy leaves a mark, a subtle indentation upon the skin that maps the geography of a life lived. We spend our youth trying to smooth these surfaces, to remain unwritten, yet there is a profound, quiet dignity in the way a face eventually becomes a landscape of its own. It is a record of survival, a testament to the thousands of days that have been weathered and survived. To look closely at such a map is to read a history that no book could ever fully contain. What is it that we are truly looking for when we trace the lines of a life we have not lived ourselves?

Traces of Old Age by Ozan Bural

Ozan Bural has captured this quiet history in his beautiful portrait titled Traces of Old Age. It is a gentle reminder that every face holds a story worth reading. Will you take a moment to look closer at the map written here?