# Trademarks of the Heart

## What We Choose to Protect

A trademark is more than a legal mark. It is a promise kept visible. When a baker stamps her initials into every loaf or a woodworker burns his symbol into the handle of a chair, something quiet happens. They are saying: this piece of the world carries my care. 

In a time when so much feels temporary, a trademark becomes an act of steadiness. It tells customers and strangers alike that the person behind the work intends to be found and held accountable, not just today but tomorrow as well.

## The Mark We Leave

Most of us never register anything with an office. Yet we all leave trademarks on the lives we touch. The way a father listens without interrupting becomes the mark his children unconsciously copy. The neighbor who always waves first trademarks her street with kindness. These invisible signatures outlast any logo.

We trademark the world not with ink or metal, but with repeated, gentle choices. Consistency itself becomes the brand. People learn they can trust the steadiness long before they understand why.

## A Small Memory

My grandmother never owned a business, yet everything she made carried her mark. She signed her quilts not with thread but with the particular way she chose colors that somehow made you feel safe. Years after she died, I found one of her quilts in a thrift store. I knew it was hers before I saw the tiny stitched initial in the corner. The feeling arrived first. That is the deepest trademark of all.

*In the end, the marks that matter most are the ones written in how we choose to show up, again and again.*