The Weight of Waiting
There is a specific silence that gathers around a person who has spent a lifetime being useful, only to find the world has quietly moved on without them. It is not the silence of peace, but the silence of a tool set down on a workbench, waiting for a hand that no longer reaches for it. I think of my grandfather’s hands, calloused and mapped with veins like riverbeds, resting idle on his knees in the final years. He was a man who built houses, yet in the end, he was only a man sitting in a chair, watching the dust motes dance in the afternoon light. We mistake this stillness for emptiness, but it is actually a heavy, pressurized space. It is the weight of all the labor that has been performed and all the recognition that has been withheld. When a person is reduced to the act of waiting, what is the geography of their internal landscape? Does it look like a map of everywhere they have been, or a map of everywhere they are no longer allowed to go?

Jose Juniel Rivera-Negron has captured this profound gravity in his image titled Over 60 Years of Age. He invites us to look past the surface of a single moment and witness the dignity held within that long, quiet wait. Does this stillness speak to you of what has been lost, or of what is still being held?


Black-eared wheatear by Sarvenaz Saadat