A lingering memory hovers over this spot. The soft crunch of gravel beneath my boots, the filtered light through pine and oak, the scent of warm stone and moss—all of it felt at once familiar and distant, like a half-remembered tune that returns in full when you hear the first few notes. I hadn’t thought about the simple bench until I turned the bend this summer day on the South Rim Trail.
It was still there. The same humble bench nestled beside a cedar, its weathered frame now bearing the patina of years. The tree remained slightly bowed as if in silent conversation with the bench it had embraced.. The space between them, still and shaded, seemed to invite reflection without demanding it.

I sat down, letting the moment settle around me. In the gorge below, water moved quietly through sculpted shale, the same layered gray that once caught my attention through a camera lens long packed away. From this overlook, the view had scarcely changed: stone and water, green clinging to cliff, sky rolling in above it all. My photograph captures it now just as it might have then—perhaps from the same angle. The gorge unfolding in a graceful arc, with trees perched impossibly along the sheer face.
It struck me, not as a grand revelation but with quiet certainty, that very few places in life offer such stillness. So much shifts in the world—landscapes erode, trails are rerouted, lives move forward. Yet here I was again, sitting in the same spot, as though the intervening decades had folded in on themselves.

Back then, I had rested here out of curiosity, pausing to take in the view, enjoy a respite. Now, I sat with a deeper kind of stillness. The second photograph holds the space as I found it—quiet, dappled with shadow, edges softened by time. The fence beyond it remains, unchanged, a modest boundary between the trail and the deep gorge beyond.
I don’t remember what thoughts filled my mind that first time. But today, a kind of gentle gratitude rose instead. Gratitude for the bench, yes—but also for the path that led me here again, for the act of remembering, and for the rare gift of finding something familiar, something steady.

A final image frames just the bench, its surface worn smooth, its structure slightly leaning now. A single flower petal had fallen on the wood—a quiet grace note in the morning light. I stood and took that last photo as a way of holding the moment, though I knew no picture could fully capture what it meant to find something that had waited without fanfare.
As I turned and walked back along the rim, I felt lighter. Not because time had reversed or been conquered, but because it had been witnessed—and somehow, that was enough.
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have a nice new week, Michael
🙋 see ya
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Yes, another Monday with all that follows. Thanks for the shoutout, Gianmarco.
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hold on 🙋
see ya soon
another week is beginning
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At first I wondered why the metal barrier was there … then all gloriously revealed! Perfect bench location!
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There are vantage points from the other fence side, with the cliff, where the why of the fence is clear. Thanks for visiting, Annika.
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The bench is important, the pictures beautiful.
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Beautiful fully but I think the fence should be removed and a sigh displayed with warnings for the stupid.
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Thankfully, Khurt, throughout the USA this is the standard for public spaces. It is an ugly fence, very much needed in this spot. Thanks for stopping by..
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Nothing can beat a walk with nature and a camera at one’s side. I enjoyed the photos. I finally am getting back outside after some colder than normal weather here.
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the cold affected broad swaths of the country and farther south than usual.
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Nature is perfect – if we let it.
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Beautifully said, GP. Nature asks so little of us—just to slow down, pay attention, and let its quiet wisdom unfold. Thank you for your thoughtful reflection.
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