There’s a way our quiet habits keep stitching us together, even when the world feels scattered. I think about this sometimes when I’m washing dishes with my friend Malik after Sunday dinners. No big declarations, just the two of us in the kitchen, sleeves rolled, hands slippery with soap. He always passes me the plates before I ask, like he knows exactly how I like to stack them on the rack — bowls on the left, cups upside down. We don’t talk about it, but it feels like a kind of language, this careful passing back and forth.
Last week, he hummed a bit of an old gospel song while we worked, nothing loud, just under his breath. I joined in, off-key and smiling. No performance, just the sound of home weaving through the steam. He nudged my shoulder when I got the lyrics wrong and kept humming anyway, like there was all the time in the world to get it right.
It’s not a grand gesture. It’s not even remarkable, if you look at it from the outside. But in that small kitchen, I felt seen in a way that’s hard to explain. Like someone cared enough to learn my version of ordinary. There’s a softness in being known like that, where you don’t have to explain the little things. Malik doesn’t ask why I do the dishes the way I do. He just does it with me, like we’ve always shared this rhythm.
Sometimes belonging looks like a plate passed at just the right moment, or a song that’s a little off but still ours. That’s enough for me. That’s what it feels like to be held.
