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.


