The Geography of Time
The smell of dry earth and ancient incense clings to the back of my throat, a scent that tastes like dust and long-forgotten rain. When I run my fingers over the rough bark of an old tree, I feel the same resistance that time leaves on skin. It is a slow, rhythmic carving—the way a riverbed deepens or a stone smooths under a thousand years of touch. We are not merely flesh and bone; we are landscapes. Every line on a palm or a brow is a map of a season we survived, a drought we endured, or a harvest we celebrated. There is a heavy, grounded silence in this, a weight that settles into the marrow of the shoulders. It is the feeling of sitting on a porch at dusk, watching the shadows lengthen until the world becomes a single, quiet breath. How much of our own history is written in the creases of our skin, waiting for someone to trace the story back to its beginning?

Ryszard Wierzbicki has captured this profound sense of history in his portrait titled A Grey Bearded Man. The way the light rests upon his features feels like the touch of a hand that has seen everything. Does this face remind you of a story you have carried for a long time?


