# The Quiet Craft of Lore ## What We Choose to Remember Lore is not the grand tale told by kings or heroes. It is the small thing passed from one hand to another: a recipe, a warning, a joke that still makes someone laugh thirty years later. The domain name *lore.md* feels like a quiet acknowledgment of this. In a world that moves quickly, lore asks us to slow down and keep what matters. We all carry fragments of lore. The way your grandmother pronounced a certain word. The street your father took to avoid traffic. These pieces rarely make it into history books, yet they shape how we see the world more than most official records ever could. ## The Markdown of Memory There is something fitting about pairing lore with the simple, honest grammar of Markdown. Both resist ornament. Markdown does not pretend to be more than plain text with a few gentle signals. Lore works the same way. It survives not because it is polished, but because it is useful and true enough to repeat. When we write in Markdown we leave room for the next person to add their own line. Lore does the same. Each teller changes the story slightly, not to improve it for vanity, but to make it fit the ear of a new listener. The form stays light so the meaning can travel. ## A Small Inheritance My friend’s father died last spring. Among his things was a battered notebook filled with weather observations he had kept for forty-two years. Not scientific data, just notes like *“Heavy dew this morning, good for the tomatoes”* or *“Wind from the east tasted of salt.”* No one asked him to keep that record. He simply noticed, wrote it down, and passed the habit on. That notebook is lore in its purest form. Not dramatic, not famous, yet rich with attention and care. *In the end we become the small stories we choose to keep.*