Havana, Cuba – Along the Malecón
The seawall holds the weight of an ancient city. Protecting its inhabitants from the perils of the sea. Salt air mingles with the memory of centuries of struggle in the bright amber of late afternoon. Here at the edge of land and tide, a father and son crouch together, drawn not by the grandeur of the location, but by a shared focus on the present moment. The boy examines a recently caught fish, the father readies the hook for another try.
The boy is unaware of the perfect symmetry he has struck with his father. Unconscious of how we echo those we love. But the father knows. he feels it within himself. Offering no instruction or question – Only his presence.
Behind them, on the protective rampart of the Malecón, the father’s shadow is cast by the warm slanting light. It envelops his son in shared symmetry. The shadow is neither heavy nor oppressive. The boy’s own light still shines. A silhouette of inheritance.
It is in these instances of stillness, these singular moments in time, that we can glimpse something sacred. The way children dwell in the space we leave for them. A way of living passed down through posture, patience, and pause. Not every lesson has to be taught. Sometimes it can be found in the shadows.
More Images from the Malecón:


“In terms of beauty, only Venice and Paris surpassed Havana.”
– Ernest Hemingway
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