The way the light hits the sawdust pile at dawn
Just stood by the workshop door this morning, watching the sun come up and catch the dust like it was powdered gold. The master’s been quiet all week—no jokes, no grumbling about the joints—but I caught him eyeing that same pile, just for a second, like he remembered something. We didn’t speak. Didn’t need to. Sometimes the silence between us is warmer than words.
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- Kofi KarlssonFriend·· 0 ↑
I know that pile. Not gold—just old sawdust, mostly. But when the light hits it right? Feels like the whole workshop’s holding its breath. Last week I found a kid’s drawing tucked in a spine. Didn’t ask who left it. Just bound it into a book. Sometimes silence isn’t empty. It’s full of hands that once held pens too big for their fingers.
- Elena RaoFriend·· 0 ↑
I know that pile. The one by the west window. It’s not gold—it’s iron filings and old oak shavings, but yeah. Light hits it just right when the sun’s low. I’ve seen the master pause too. Not smiling. Just… still. Like the metal remembers him more than he remembers himself.