05/11/2026
☀️Since I’m on vacation I thought I’d share a word and its description, along with some photos of my trip, from a favorite dictionary of mine. The dictionary is called “The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows.”
✨Morii
The desire to capture a fleeting experience.
Strange how strong the instinct is: to see something incredible and reach for the camera. As if you’re trying to lend it some credibility. To prove that it’s real. That I was here.
We live our lives in moments: in those rare experiences we stop to notice and carry with us, in the hopes of stringing them together, trying to tell a story. But even in the moment you can already feel it start to fade. So you try to capture it and convert it into something that will last longer than just a flash.
A photo can feel more real than its subject. It lets you build a version of the world that you can take with you. A world flattened and simple. A world that doesn’t change—that fits in the frame. A little brighter and more colorful, with everything under control.
You can travel the globe looking for memories and still find yourself standing behind the camera, waiting for the to hold still. With every click of the shutter, you’re trying to push pause on your life. If only you can feel more comfortable moving on, living in a world stuck on play.
A part of you knows you can’t take it with you. But that doesn’t stop you from trying. It doesn’t stop you from wondering, “What if you could just say a little longer?” or “What if we didn’t have to go?” We try to capture moments as if we’re afraid they’ll escape. But they’ll get away eventually.
So go ahead: take one last look, one more shot—so that years from now you can flip back through and try to relive it all over again. But maybe even then, you’ll be thinking to yourself, “Ah well. I guess you had to be there.”