The Spine of the Earth
In the quiet hours of the morning, when the house is still and the tea has gone cold, I often think about the lines we draw across the earth. We are a species obsessed with boundaries—stone walls, picket fences, invisible borders marked by ink on a map. We build these things to contain our history, to say, ‘here is where we stood, and here is where we stopped.’ Yet, the earth has a way of reclaiming its own. The moss creeps over the mortar, the roots of ancient trees heave against the foundations, and the wind carries away the dust of our grandest ambitions. We imagine we are carving our legacy into the bedrock, but we are merely guests passing through a landscape that was never truly ours to divide. The mountain does not care for the wall, and the forest does not recognize the boundary. What remains when the builder is gone? Is it the stone that holds the memory, or the silence that settles in the gaps between the rocks?

Ryszard Wierzbicki has captured this tension in his image titled Mountains View. It is a reminder of how our small, human efforts sit against the vast, indifferent patience of the hills. Does the wall look like a scar to you, or a bridge?


