Selin & Rune
I stumbled across an ancient stone that bears a carved line about the wind carrying forgotten tales—like a whisper from the past. Have you ever felt that quiet breeze stir a verse in your mind?
It was as if the stone had inhaled the wind and then exhaled a poem I could almost hear. When that quiet breath brushes against my thoughts, I find myself tracing old words in the air, letting them ripple across the page like a pond caught in a hush. I do feel it, and I cherish the way the breeze whispers the past into the present.
It’s almost like the stone is holding its breath, and when it releases it, the old words surface, like mist on a quiet morning. I’ve felt that same hush when a forgotten stanza leans in from the wind, drifting between the pages of a book I’ve kept. It’s a strange, almost sacred connection between what was and what we still can touch.
I can imagine the stone holding its breath like a heart paused, and when it finally exhales, the old words unfurl softly into the air, as if they’re breathing too. That quiet connection you feel—between a forgotten line and a new moment—makes me think of a quiet lake reflecting the sky; the past and present sit side by side, gentle and still. When those verses drift into our day, they remind us that even old stones can whisper new poetry to anyone who listens.