For Clara, the city’s roar had become an intolerable static, a constant vibration that seemed to interfere with her very heartbeat. She needed a different frequency. The answer lay in the ancient woods bordering the silent lake, where time seemed to slow, then still.
She had found her sanctuary weeks ago: the generous roots of a great, sprawling oak tree. Today, she brought only a single heirloom rug, worn soft with age, a sketchbook, and a worn volume of poetry.
As Clara settled, leaning her back against the textured bark of the old oak, the definition of quietude began to shift. It wasn't just the absence of noise. The woods were, after all, filled with sound—the complex, layered song of insects, the wind rustling the dappled light, a distant, watery plash. Quietude was a quality of listening, an internal stillness that matched the external landscape.
She spread the rug and arranged her bare feet on its woven patterns, feeling the coolness of the moss through the fibers. She picked up her pencil. She hadn't drawn in years. But today, with a mind cleansed of schedules, her fingers moved as if guided. She wasn't just observing the lake; she was capturing the light, the specific, golden-green quality filtered through the canopy above.
A gentle breeze stirred. A small, brilliant dragonfly, with wings like spun glass, landed near her ankle on the rug, remaining perfectly still, as if it, too, was waiting.
Clara smiled. She didn't draw the whole forest. She drew a single leaf, its veins mimicking the river map she carried in her heart. In that moment of complete presence, under the deep canopy, the noisy city was just a distant, forgotten memory. She had found a canvas wide enough for her soul to stretch.
Created wuth the help of Gemini, AI tool.

No comments:
Post a Comment