You have thousands of photos on your phone. Not the ones you posted. The ones you scrolled past and never deleted.
Each one is a doorway to a story you haven't told yet.
Graduation season is the annual reminder that the people who cheered loudest in the audience are the ones who showed up first.
The story isn't the diploma. It's the kitchen-table conversations that happened before anyone knew there would be one.
What's the first song you remember your parents listening to?
Not the one you learned to love later. The one that was already playing — on the radio, on a record, humming from another room — before you knew what music was.
What's the first song you remember your parents listening to?
Not the one you learned to love later. The one that was already playing — on the radio, on a record, humming from another room — before you knew what music was.
Welcome to the @BZZROfficial fam @Kofie!!!
And for all of you, go sign up and download our app. We’re building something pretty rad over here on @BZZROfficial. Go sports!
The useful thing about iloomi is that it doesn’t ask you to sound polished first. Start with one detail you can actually see. The coffee mug. The route home. The sentence someone always used. The story usually gets clearer from there.
Spring-cleaning always looks like it’s about stuff.
Half the time it’s really about the stories attached to it.
The coat nobody wears.
The recipe card no one can throw out.
The box you keep reopening before you decide anything.
What turns into a family story every time you try to clear space?
A good family-story question usually starts with one object. The recipe card with a stain on it. The jacket in the hall closet. The watch nobody wears but nobody throws away. Objects are often carrying the story before anyone says it out loud.