The Café

Whenever I pass a café in my city—one that sits quietly, emptied of voices, or where the owner is gently gathering the remnants of a day—I feel something inside me ache. It’s the same quiet sorrow that autumn carries in its air: soft, elusive, and impossible to fully name… a tender loneliness that settles deep in the heart.

How many moments are born around those small tables, only to slip away unnoticed? Laughter once lingered there; stories unfolded; hearts opened—yet time carries them off so silently. Every chair feels like it remembers… as if it still holds the warmth of those who once sat, who paused their lives there, even just for a while.

And those cups of coffee—each one a silent witness. They have listened to confessions, to dreams spoken aloud, and to memories revisited—both the sweet ones that make us smile and the bitter ones that leave a quiet heaviness behind.

A café is never just a place. It is a keeper of lives, a fragile archive of fleeting moments. For a brief time, people walk in, sit down, and truly live—and then, like seasons changing, they leave… while the café remains, holding onto echoes that no one else can hear.

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