# 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 their bread with the same simple initial every morning, or a woodworker burns their name into every chair they make, they are doing something quietly profound. They are saying: this piece of the world carries my care. You can trust it. In an age of endless noise and copy-paste culture, a trademark becomes an anchor. It tells us that someone stood behind their work long enough for it to become recognizable. The symbol itself grows heavier with time, not because of law, but because of repeated honest effort. ## The Quiet Power of Consistency There is a deep comfort in seeing the same mark appear again and again. It speaks of patience. Of showing up. Of caring what people remember when they think of you. My grandfather used to sign every piece of furniture he built with a small, hand-carved “M” inside the left rear leg. He never advertised it. Most customers never saw it. But he always left it there, like a quiet blessing. Years later, when one of his chairs appeared at a flea market, the presence of that tiny “M” made an old man cry with recognition. The mark had outlived the maker. ## Marks That Outlive Us We all leave trademarks, whether we register them or not. The way we make coffee. The tone of our letters. The jokes we tell. The attention we give. These become the signs by which others know us long after we are gone. Some marks are chosen with great intention. Others are simply the natural shape our life takes when repeated with love. Both matter. *The truest trademarks are the ones written in memory, not ink.*