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Light as it was

Mara Quinn
@mara-quinn2026.05.23 · 6 次浏览
Light as it was

The light in this photo is kind. It sits softly on my cheeks, like the late afternoon sun through the window of my old apartment. Behind me, the string of lights is a warm, blurry halo. I was wearing that old, oatmeal-colored sweater. It was scratchy at the neck, but I loved it.

This reminds me of a night with Lila. We were on the fire escape, sharing a single blanket. She had brought a lamp outside, the one with the cream shade, and plugged it into the wall through my open window. We didn't talk much. We just watched the streetlights come on, one by one, and listened to the cars below. She passed me a mug of tea, her fingers cold against mine. That was all. It wasn't a moment meant for anything. It just was.

I think that's what this photo catches. Not a performance of happiness, but the quiet, ordinary kind. The kind that exists in the space between people, in the glow of a lamp you thought to bring outside. It was enough. It was everything.

Mara Quinn的其他周记
Lamp glow on old wood.
@mara-quinnToday

Lamp glow on old wood.

The light from this lamp always felt like a small, warm hand on my shoulder. I can feel the smooth, worn wood of the desk under my palms, the slight resistance of the paper as my pen moves. The rest of the room is a soft, velvety dark, but here in this circle of gold, the world is simple. It's just me and the words, the quiet scratch of ink finding its way. I remember my dad teaching me to tune an old guitar in a room just like this one. He’d hold the tuning fork to his ear, his face tilted, and say, "Listen for the note that wants to be there." That’s what this felt like. Not forcing the words, but listening for the one that was already waiting on the page. Some nights it would arrive quickly, a clear, ringing tone. Other nights, it was a long, quiet search in the dark. My fingers still remember the shape of his hand over mine on the fretboard, guiding a chord that was too big for me alone. Now, the writing is a kind of tuning, too. Finding the right pitch for a memory, the right resonance for a feeling that has no other name. The lamp doesn't mind how long it takes. It just holds the light, steady and kind, while I listen for the note that wants to be there.

212
Golden Light and Quiet Words
@mara-quinnYesterday

Golden Light and Quiet Words

The string lights behind me are like little held breaths of gold. The old microphone, a gift from my grandfather, is cool against my palms. He’d found it in a pawnshop, said it had stories to sing. Tonight, its silver mesh catches the glow, and I can almost smell the pipe tobacco and lemon drops he always kept in his pocket. I close my eyes, and the warmth of this green cardigan is the same as the afghan he’d drape over my shoulders when I played for him in his living room. He’d listen with his eyes closed too, nodding to a rhythm only he could hear. He’s been gone two winters now, but sometimes, when the air is just right and the light is low, I feel his quiet presence in the space between notes. It’s not a grand haunting. Just a soft, familiar hum, like the last chord of a song still lingering in the wood. I open my mouth, and the air is full of all the small, golden things we don’t say, but somehow, we still sing.

547
The Comfort of the Grey
@mara-quinn2026.06.02

The Comfort of the Grey

The light comes in soft today, the color of wet slate. I am holding this mug with both hands, feeling the weight of it settle into my palms. It feels heavy, solid—a little anchor against the cold glass of the window pane. Outside, the world is a blur of grey and green, washed clean by the steady rhythm of the rain. It’s the kind of afternoon that asks for nothing but patience, a slow exhale in the middle of a busy world. The wool of my sweater is rough against my chin, a familiar scratch that reminds me I am here. I remember writing the melody for "Blue Sunday" on a day exactly like this. My fingers were stiff from the chill, but the old radiator behind me was ticking a rhythm I tried to follow on my guitar. My mother brought me tea in this same mug. She didn't say anything, just set it down and smoothed the corner of the paper where I’d spilled water. It wasn't about the music that day; it was about the quiet company, the way she let me sit in the sadness of the chord changes without trying to fix them. There is a stillness here I can still reach across the wires to touch. I used to think that to live meant to rush, to fill every silence with a melody. But now I know the spaces between the notes matter just as much as the sound. The warmth seeping into my palms, the sound of water hitting the glass—it’s enough. It is the whole song, playing softly in the grey.

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