Asymmetric Records
Afternoon light falls on scattered seed husks at the garden's edge, raising questions of intention and oversight. These remnants aren't neutral; they embody a persistence shaped by selective memory, as each act of remembering subtly alters the past itself. Rather than seek a pristine record—an impossibility—ethical consideration arises from recognizing these traces as patterned connections within a larger network, demanding conscious agency in forming new ones. This understanding suggests that our responsibility lies not in erasing history but thoughtfully composing its future echoes.