令和7年12月6日(土)
朝4時起床 寒い朝 起きてすぐエアコン付ける
ユーチューブの自分のページ何となく見た 配信後のアーカイブって何気に再生されているんだと実感 配信のやり方を考えなければと少し思った その後英語の勉強始める
京都鉄道博物館の動画の編集を始める
今日の絵

December 6, 2025 — A Little Light
When the city turned quiet and cold, Mina found an old paper lantern in the bottom of a moving box. It was small and a little bent, but soft light still lived behind its thin surface. She remembered the warm lunches her grandmother used to make, the way her voice rose and fell like a song. The lantern smelled of dust and cedar, and that smell carried memories faster than winter wind.
Mina carried the lantern to her apartment window and set it beside the glass. Outside, the street lamps blinked on and the first stars came trembling into the sky. The lantern’s light was nothing like the bright streetlights — it was closer, quieter, like a secret left on a table. As she watched, someone below walked slowly, holding a steaming cup. The person stopped under a bare tree and looked up, as if expecting something small and kind to appear.
At that moment, Mina felt something shift inside her. The city had been moving too fast for weeks: work, trains, plans that kept changing. The lantern asked for only one thing — to be noticed. She fetched a piece of paper and wrote a polite note: “Take this light if you need it.” Folding it carefully, she tied it to the handle with thin string and opened the window.
The person below glanced up, then reached for the lantern. For a second their faces were lit in the same warm color, and the world felt slightly kinder. Mina smiled and closed the window. The small light left her room but what it carried stayed — the quiet permission to slow down, even for a moment. That night she slept as if the city had wrapped her in a soft coat.
In the morning, the lantern was gone. On the windowsill, a scrap of string remained and a tiny note in a different hand: “Thank you. I needed the light.” Mina kept that scrap in a drawer. Sometimes, when the city felt too loud, she would open the drawer and remember the small, steady way a single light could change the shape of a day.
