# Trademarks of the Heart

## What We Choose to Mark

A trademark is more than a legal sign. It is a promise kept visible. When a maker puts their mark on something, they say: this piece of work carries my name, therefore it carries my care. In a world of endless noise and quick production, a trademark becomes an act of quiet courage. It claims responsibility.

We all trademark our lives in smaller ways. The way we greet strangers, the steadiness of our promises, the tone we use when no one is watching. These are the marks others remember us by long after the moment passes.

## The Space Between Marks

There is something beautiful about the empty space that surrounds a good mark. A strong trademark does not need to shout. It trusts that those who matter will recognize it. The best ones feel inevitable, as though they were always meant to stand for that particular person or creation.

This reminds me that identity is not built by adding more. It is often revealed by what we choose to protect and what we deliberately leave unmarked. restraint can be its own form of honesty.

## A Quiet Inheritance

My grandfather never registered anything. Yet every tool in his shed carried his mark: the way the handles were wrapped with worn leather, the precise angle of the nails he drove. Years after he was gone, I could pick up a hammer and know instantly it had been his. The trademark had passed through touch and memory rather than paperwork.

We leave marks whether we intend to or not. The question is whether we make them with intention.

*On this ordinary July day, may we mark the world gently and honestly.*