The Roughness of Stillness
There is a specific, dry heat that lives in the bark of an old tree. It is a smell of sun-baked sap and ancient, crumbling wood, a scent that clings to your fingertips long after you have pulled your hand away. When you press your palm against that rough, uneven surface, you feel the slow, rhythmic pulse of something that does not measure time in minutes or hours. It is a heavy, grounded patience. We spend our lives rushing toward the next horizon, our skin rarely touching anything that hasn’t been smoothed by machines or polished by habit. We forget the friction of the wild, the way a jagged edge can remind us that we are solid, that we are here, anchored to the earth by the simple act of leaning into the grit. If you closed your eyes and let your skin map the world, would you still feel the need to move so quickly?

Nirupam Roy has captured this quiet intensity in his photograph titled Taking My Photo. It is a study in texture that makes me want to reach out and feel the rough, living scales of the world he found. Does this stillness make you want to slow your own pulse?


