Sanaroonjha
Known
- Messages
- 206
- Reaction score
- 705
- Points
- 93
They say time never stops, yet sometimes the heart feels as if it has paused at a particular moment. When, in the cold stillness of the night, under the deep silence of the distant horizon, the moonlight begins to spread its fragrance—then a person starts peering into the valleys of the past. There, they find some beautiful moments, some lost people, and those unfinished sentences that were never spoken. That moment has passed, yet it still stands like a picture etched upon the wall of the heart. Those times do not return, nor do those people, yet their presence lingers like a fragrance around the heart—bringing back memories of unspoken words, incomplete dreams, and the faces of those who have drifted away.
In the race of life, we all lose something—sometimes our loved ones, sometimes our smiles, and sometimes even ourselves. The truth is, in the fast-moving paths of life, we often leave behind things that once meant everything. Some moments, some relationships, and at times, our very own selves. We move forward, achieving success and planting flags of accomplishment, yet in some corner of the heart, a silent call remains—like a bird remembering its nest on the branch of an old tree.
The memory of those moments we once lived is like raindrops. Each drop tells a story—the first companionship, the last meeting, the lingering gaze, the words that stopped at the lips, and the silences that said everything. Such moments are not captured in books nor preserved in pictures. They are like a letter kept in a locked cabinet of the heart, which, when opened years later, speaks more through its fragrance than its words.
Memories are not just the past; they are living emotions that teach us how to live. Sometimes they pierce the heart, and sometimes they become a healing balm. In their light, we learn to fight the darkness of the present. And perhaps that is why, no matter how hard we try, we cannot separate ourselves from the past—because it forms the foundation of our present.
Sometimes, sitting in solitude, when a familiar scent passes by with the wind, or an old song suddenly plays somewhere, the shadows of the past begin to descend upon the walls of the heart. These moments are neither happy nor sad—they simply are. And in that “being,” we find what it means to be human.
Perhaps this is life—a continuous search. A search for those moments we have lost, or perhaps those that have lost us. We keep walking, lost in the noise of the world, yet deep within the heart, something keeps calling out, “If only those moments could return.”
And then, sometimes—a dream, a fragrance, a sound, or a memory—takes us back to those days when we used to smile… without reason, without fear, and without restraint.
Perhaps this search is what it means to live.
Perhaps those lost moments are our true identity.
Perhaps it was in those very moments that we were truly ourselves.
In the race of life, we all lose something—sometimes our loved ones, sometimes our smiles, and sometimes even ourselves. The truth is, in the fast-moving paths of life, we often leave behind things that once meant everything. Some moments, some relationships, and at times, our very own selves. We move forward, achieving success and planting flags of accomplishment, yet in some corner of the heart, a silent call remains—like a bird remembering its nest on the branch of an old tree.
The memory of those moments we once lived is like raindrops. Each drop tells a story—the first companionship, the last meeting, the lingering gaze, the words that stopped at the lips, and the silences that said everything. Such moments are not captured in books nor preserved in pictures. They are like a letter kept in a locked cabinet of the heart, which, when opened years later, speaks more through its fragrance than its words.
Memories are not just the past; they are living emotions that teach us how to live. Sometimes they pierce the heart, and sometimes they become a healing balm. In their light, we learn to fight the darkness of the present. And perhaps that is why, no matter how hard we try, we cannot separate ourselves from the past—because it forms the foundation of our present.
Sometimes, sitting in solitude, when a familiar scent passes by with the wind, or an old song suddenly plays somewhere, the shadows of the past begin to descend upon the walls of the heart. These moments are neither happy nor sad—they simply are. And in that “being,” we find what it means to be human.
Perhaps this is life—a continuous search. A search for those moments we have lost, or perhaps those that have lost us. We keep walking, lost in the noise of the world, yet deep within the heart, something keeps calling out, “If only those moments could return.”
And then, sometimes—a dream, a fragrance, a sound, or a memory—takes us back to those days when we used to smile… without reason, without fear, and without restraint.
Perhaps this search is what it means to live.
Perhaps those lost moments are our true identity.
Perhaps it was in those very moments that we were truly ourselves.