Monday, June 29, 2026

Circling Seasons

At the edge of a forgotten mountain path lay an old Zen garden. Its stones had not been moved in years. The gravel, once carefully raked into flowing patterns, had long since surrendered to the wind and rain. Moss crept gently over weathered lanterns, and a wooden gate leaned quietly on tired hinges.

No pilgrims came.

No monks swept the paths.

No voices disturbed the silence.

Soon autumn would arrive, as it always had.

The maple leaves would loosen their grip one by one, floating without haste onto the pale stones below. The morning air would sharpen, carrying the scent of cedar and damp earth. A cool wind would pass through the bamboo, not announcing itself, not asking to be admired.

There would be no one to call it beautiful.

No painter to preserve it.

No poet to give it words.

Yet the leaves would fall all the same.

Autumn had never required applause.

In time, winter would quietly inherit the garden. Snow would soften every edge until stones, lanterns, and empty pathways became gentle white shapes beneath a silent sky. The pond would freeze. Frost would lace each blade of grass with crystal. The world would appear to sleep.

Still, no witness would come.

Then spring.

The ice would surrender to sunlight. Tiny green shoots would push through the earth with effortless determination. Cherry blossoms would bloom for only a handful of days before scattering themselves upon the breeze, never mourning how briefly they had lived.

Summer would follow, filling the garden with birdsong, dragonflies, and the endless chorus of insects beneath warm evenings. Ferns would unfurl. Moss would deepen into emerald carpets. Rain would nourish every hidden root.

And then, almost unnoticed, autumn would return once more.

The seasons circled without memory and without expectation.

None asked whether they mattered.

None questioned whether they were seen.

The mountain did not long for visitors.

The stream did not wonder if anyone heard its song.

The flowers did not bloom for an audience.

Only human beings believed that beauty needed witnesses.

The garden knew otherwise.

It understood that the universe had never been a performance.

The maple leaf falls because it is time.

The snow comes because it is winter.

The blossom opens because it cannot help but bloom.

Existence requires no audience to justify itself.

As evening settled over the empty garden, a single leaf drifted onto an ancient stone.

No eyes beheld it.

No hands gathered it.

The forest remained silent.

And in that silence, nothing was missing.

 

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