May this journal be your soft landing—or your launching pad.
A samara does not fall straight down. It autorotates. It hesitates. It spins away from the trunk that made it, not in defeat, but in design.
I found one last Tuesday, lodged between the keys of my piano. It had flown three blocks, over a parking lot and a dog park, to die on middle C. I almost threw it away. Instead, I taped it to the wall above my desk. samara journal
In this issue, we wander through orchards in late autumn, we interview a woman who uprooted her life to plant a food forest, and we learn why the things that look like they are falling are often just finding the right air current.
Since "Samara" has multiple meanings (a winged seed from a tree, a city in Russia, or a name meaning "protected by God"), I have focused on the most poetic and common literary interpretation: May this journal be your soft landing—or your
The maple seed lands on the windowsill of a stranger. It has no passport, no plan. Just a wing and a weight.
This season, we are thinking about that specific kind of courage: the slow spiral away from the familiar. We are taught to hold on—to jobs, to identities, to a version of ourselves we wrote in pencil years ago. But what if our purpose is not to grip, but to disperse ? It hesitates
With dirt under the fingernails, Featured Essay (Opening Paragraph) Title: The Cartography of Fallen Leaves By: Elena Voss