To Live, Not Display- UNPOSTED MOMENTS
They asked me for a photo—
a mother, a daughter,
draped in reverence,
eyes lit not by flash,
but by the flame of faith.
They stood before the goddess,
not posing,
but pausing—
in stillness that sought to hold
a whisper of grace.
I obliged, clicked,
and wondered:
was the memory not already etched
in the breath they held,
in the silence they offered?
Later, on the street,
a café buzzed with youth—
designer mugs and contorted smiles,
tongues out, cheeks sucked in,
as if joy required angles
and peace needed filters.
Photos snapped,
faces stretched—
not for memory,
but for broadcast.
And beyond borders,
a celebrity smiled,
perfect teeth in a perfect sky,
on a perfect beach.
A smile staged for headlines,
not heartbeats.
Why do we frame our lives
not on walls
but on feeds?
Why must a moment
exist twice—
once in soul,
and once in public?
Does joy require applause?
Does proof demand pixels?
I find myself leaning
not toward the loud,
not toward the lens,
but toward
the unsaid smile,
the prayer unsnapped,
the memory that lives
only in the body that felt it.
Because not all truth
wants to be shared,
not all beauty
needs validation.
Some moments
are meant to dissolve
into silence—
carried,
not posted.
Wow! I loved the last para. So profound! Thanks
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