කතාව වාර්තා කරන්න

The Comment Trap

A comment can feel

like a tiny crown.

Post it fast,

then scroll back down.

Ten likes.

Three replies.

One stranger laughs.

One stranger lies.

Then tomorrow comes,

and the comment is gone.

Buried under memes,

ads, and noise by dawn.

All that effort.

All that heat.

All that cleverness

lost in the feed.

Lehan said:

“A comment is a spark.

But a story is a fire.

A post can disappear.

A book can climb higher.”

So he built a better place

for words to stay.

For pages.

For memory.

For meaning.

For stories that matter.

1) The illustration depicts a young boy sitting at a wooden table, engrossed in writing in a notebook while holding a smartphone in his other hand. He wears a blue shirt and a yellow scarf, which adds a splash of color to the otherwise muted palette. His hair is tousled, and he has a look of concentration on his face, suggesting he is lost in thought. Surrounding him, a swirling cloud of emoticons in various colors appears to represent the noise of online comments—some happy, some sad, and others angry—contrasting with the soft, golden glow of floating images that represent memories or stories. These images, resembling snapshots, depict the boy in different outdoor settings, hinting at adventures and meaningful moments. The background is a deep blue, dotted with stars, creating a dreamy atmosphere. A small plant and a cup filled with colored pencils sit on the table, emphasizing a creative space. The overall mood is reflective, capturing the contrast between fleeting online interaction

1 matched name linked to the Names index.

කැලිෆෝර්ණියා, එක්සත් ජනපදය එක්සත් ජනපදයේ කැලිෆෝර්ණියාහි ලියන ලද, පළ කළ සහ නිර්මාණය කළ