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  • Harry Potter & The Hidden Flame pt. 2

    hree speckled ceramic cups on a wooden lighthouse balcony railing overlooking an autumn valley and winding river at sunset, including two coffee mugs and a child’s sippy cup with a pink lighthouse drawing.
    June 22, 2026

    It is over. An end to a beautiful beginning.

    Seven books. Eight films. Because some endings cannot fit inside one.

    Deathly Hallows was split into two. Not because the studio wanted more money. Because the story needed more room. Part 1 was the escape. Part 2 was the acceptance. Part 1 was running. Part 2 was turning around and facing what you had been running from.

    Hogwarts Week was supposed to be seven posts. It is now eight. For the same reason.

    Part 1, Harry Potter and the Hidden Flame, was the escape. I wrote it on day seven because I could not publish what was supposed to be there. This, Part 2, is the acceptance. The part where I stop running and explain why.

    Before Hogwarts Week, I had writer’s block. Seven posts on the blog and the words had stopped coming. So I invented a challenge. Seven Potter-themed posts in seven days. A way to force the block open. It worked.

    But while all of that was happening, there was another post. One I had been carrying for much longer. Written during my vacation. Rewritten after. About Harry and Hermione and Lily-Rose. About the greener grass we never stop painting. About a word in Arabic that I inherited from my mother and spent without noticing. القناعة. It was called Stay Here. Grow Old. And it had nothing to do with Hogwarts Week. It existed before the challenge. Before the block. Before any of the seven days.

    But I could not publish it.

    The first time I came to post it, I was not ready. So I did not. The next day I revisited it. Still not ready. So I told myself the problem was the featured image. It needed a better one. When I had the better one, I came to post it. But by then, things had changed. Circumstances had changed. So I held off and rewrote it to match. When the rewrite was done, the featured image no longer fit the new version.

    Then Hogwarts Week started. And on day six I realised Stay Here. Grow Old was Potter themed. It could close the week. Day seven. The final post. Perfect.

    And on day seven, as I was reading it one last time, I deleted it. Maybe by mistake. Maybe on purpose dressed as a mistake. The kind of accident that only happens when part of you wanted it to happen. Because I was not ready. I was never ready. And every excuse, every delay, every rewrite, every image that did not fit was me already knowing this. I just needed to delete it to understand.

    Something broke that day. The way something broke in Voldemort the night he went to Godric’s Hollow. He made six Horcruxes on purpose. Each one planned. Each one deliberate. But the seventh was an accident. Harry. A fragment of soul that split off and attached itself to a boy without anyone planning it. Not because Voldemort chose it. Because something had already broken so badly that a piece came loose on its own.

    So instead, a new post split off on its own. A confession about never watching the films properly. About consuming Harry Potter the way a second hand smoker consumes nicotine. Standing close. Breathing. Without ever lighting one myself. I called it Harry Potter and the Hidden Flame. The accidental Horcrux. Part 1. The escape. And that is how Hogwarts Week ended. Not with the post I had been carrying. With the fragment that broke off from it.

    But Deathly Hallows did not end with Part 1. And neither does this.

    Part 2 is where Harry walks into the forest. Not to fight. To accept. He had been running the entire series. Seven books of running. And in Part 2 he stops. He walks toward the thing he had been avoiding. Not because he is brave. Because he finally understands that the running was the problem, not the destination.

    Maybe it is better this way.

    Dumbledore always knew more than he said. He answered questions with riddles. He left rooms before the conversation was finished. He kept truths in drawers he never opened in front of anyone. And when Harry asked him direct questions, he often smiled and said nothing. Not because he did not have the answer. Because some answers do more damage when spoken than when kept.

    Some things are better left unsaid. Not because you are not ready. Because they were never meant to be said. Every delay was the answer. Every excuse was the answer. Every rewrite was the answer. I just was not listening.

    Now I am.

    Hogwarts Week is over. Six Horcruxes on purpose. A seventh by accident. Seven books. Eight films. Seven planned posts. An eighth that broke off on its own. Some things break. Some fragments survive. Some endings need two parts.

    But the lighthouse is still on. The keeper is still here. And at the top of this post, the only thing that survived. A featured image for a post that no longer exists. A frame with no painting. A shell with no pearl.

    Hidden. But the flame is still warm. Always.

    One more thing. I will not be posting for a while. Three weeks. Maybe more. The keeper is not leaving the lighthouse. He is just stepping down to the workshop. Tinkering. Finishing things that were started and never completed. Starting things that have been waiting. The light stays on. The beam keeps turning. But the keeper will be downstairs. Building. And an intern will be with him assisting.

    And maybe, just maybe, while I am down there, I will start writing my own tale. Three characters. A witch. A cockroach man, a cat, and goons. A story that has been sitting in my head the way Stay Here. Grow Old was sitting on my screen. Waiting. Not ready. But not leaving either.

    Except this time, I will not delete it.

    Write in the logbook
  • Harry Potter & The Hidden Flame

    A lighthouse at night transformed into a vintage movie theatre, with a glowing marquee reading “Lighthouse Cinema,” “Harry Potter and the Hidden Flame,” and “Permanently Closed.”
    June 21, 2026

    I must confess something I am ashamed to say.

    I have never watched Harry Potter.

    You heard it. Never. Not once. Not properly. Not the way a film deserves to be watched.

    I read three of the books. To be honest I was rea-ching them. I listened to all seven through Stephen Fry’s voice, which is not listening, it is being sung to. And I consumed the films the way a second hand smoker consumes nicotine. Standing close to someone else. Breathing. Without ever lighting one myself. And ending up with a flame anyway. Not the kind you light. The kind that lights itself inside you without permission.

    I sat on a plane next to someone on a long trip who was binging the films on a small screen while I pretended to read. I put it on for my eldest son and held the remote so I could fast-forward through scenes that were not age-appropriate, while studying for an exam on the other side of the room. I watched it in a hospital room, sitting beside my father, on a crappy old LCD screen mounted on the wall. It was on mute. MBC was playing it with Arabic subtitles and I read all of it in silence between checking his IV and pretending I was fine. I watched it on my mother’s streaming account where it is on permanent loop, nodding along to her conversation, smiling, shaking my head at the right moments. She was showing me her world. Harry was showing me the wizarding world. Both playing at the same time. I was in both. I heard neither. I felt both.

    But I never watched it. Not really.

    Because watching a film, to me, is sacred.

    A film is not background noise. A film is a commitment. It is a room with the right temperature. A screen with the right size. A seat with the right position. No eating. No popcorn. No crunching. No rustling. No phone screens glowing in the dark like fallen stars that refuse to die. No one talking. No one whispering. No one explaining the plot to the person beside them who should not have come if they needed the plot explained. No cutting of scenes. No pausing for tea. No “can you rewind that bit.” Perfect sound. Perfect image. Perfect silence. And if you are watching with someone, the perfect someone. Someone who understands that the lights going off is not an invitation to open a bag of crisps. It is a contract.

    That is how a film should be watched. And I have never given Harry Potter that respect.

    And I never will.

    But the wizarding world is not done with me. New Audible editions landed this year with over two hundred voices and a full orchestra. And on Christmas Day, HBO starts the whole thing again from the beginning. Seven seasons. One book per season.

    So I will be a second hand smoker again. This time with my little one. Holding the remote. Fast-forwarding the parts he is not ready for. Pretending to work on something while the wizarding world plays in the background. Glancing up at the wrong moment. Catching a scene I was not prepared for. Feeling something I did not plan to feel.

    Because here is the thing about second hand smoke that nobody talks about. It still gets inside you. You never chose it. You never lit it. You never held it between your fingers. But the smoke drifted toward you anyway. And you breathed. And it entered. And it stayed. Hidden inside you.

    That is how I fell in love with Harry Potter. Not by watching. By standing near it long enough for it to become part of me. Accidentally. Repeatedly. Irreversibly.

    I never watched Harry Potter. But Harry Potter watched me. Through every hospital room, every plane seat, every living room, every glowing remote. It was always playing somewhere near me. And I was always pretending not to watch.

    I was always watching. Just never the way a film deserves.

    Because I watched my last film.

    Write in the logbook
  • Canon

    An antique open book with an intact Chapter 7 page on the left and a heavily torn Chapter 8 page on the right, revealing the book’s old binding beneath a lighthouse engraving.
    June 20, 2026

    The word canon comes from the Greek kanon, meaning rule or standard. It started in religion. The biblical canon is the collection of books accepted as scripture. Everything else is apocrypha. Not necessarily false. Just not official. Not part of the accepted truth.

    In fiction, canon means the same thing. It is the body of work that is accepted as the real story. The events that happened. The rules that apply. The truth of the world the author built. Everything outside of canon is fan fiction. It might be entertaining. It might even be good. But it is not the story.

    In Harry Potter, canon is simple. Seven books. Written by one person. Beginning to end. Philosopher’s Stone to Deathly Hallows. That is the story. That is the world. Those are the rules.

    Then came the Cursed Child.

    A play. Not a novel. Not written by Rowling alone but by Jack Thorne, based on a story by Rowling, Thorne, and John Tiffany. Published as a script. Sold as “the eighth story.” JK Rowling stamped it as canon. The publisher called it the official continuation. The West End marketed it as the next chapter.

    It is not.

    And I say this not because I dislike the play. I say this because the play broke the rules of the world it claims to belong to.

    Rowling created the Time-Turner in Prisoner of Azkaban with one rule: you cannot change the past. If you go back, you were always there. Then she destroyed every single Time-Turner in Order of the Phoenix because she knew the device would break her own story. She killed it on purpose.

    The Cursed Child brought it back. Changed how it works. Suddenly you can change the past. Suddenly there are alternate timelines. A device the original author destroyed because it was too dangerous was resurrected by someone else and used to do exactly what she was afraid of.

    That is not a continuation. That is a contradiction.

    And it does not stop there.

    Harry Potter, the boy who was raised by the Dursleys for eleven years, who slept under the stairs, who knows what it feels like to be unwanted, tells his son Albus that he sometimes wishes Albus was not his son. Harry Potter. The boy whose entire story is about the damage of being unloved. Says that to his own child. Not in a moment of anger that is immediately regretted. In a scene that is meant to be character development.

    And then there is Delphi. Voldemort’s daughter. With Bellatrix Lestrange. Voldemort. The character whose entire identity is defined by his inability to love. Who sees other people as tools. Who cannot form attachments. Had a child. With someone. The plot requires us to believe that the most loveless character in the history of fiction loved enough to create a life.

    The fans saw it immediately. The reviews were consistent. It reads like fan fiction. Not the good kind. The kind that does not understand the characters it is writing.

    And yet JK Rowling says it is canon.

    Here is where I disagree. Not just with the Cursed Child. With the principle.

    Canon is not decided by a stamp. It is not decided by a publisher’s marketing team. It is not even decided by the original author when the original author did not write it alone. Canon is earned by consistency. By respecting the rules. By understanding the characters well enough to know what they would and would not do. By honouring what came before.

    The Cursed Child does none of that. And the upcoming HBO series, regardless of how good it may be, will face the same question. New actors. New directors. New interpretations. New decisions. And every single one of them will either honour the original seven books or contradict them. I already know which side I will be on.

    My canon is seven books. Written by one woman. In one story. Beginning to end.

    Because some stories are better left alone.

    Not every book needs a sequel. Not every ending needs an extension. Not every world needs to be revisited by someone other than the person who built it. Some stories are complete. They said what they needed to say. They closed when they needed to close. And opening them again, no matter how good the intention, risks turning something sacred into something ordinary.

    The seven Harry Potter books are not my childhood. I discovered them with my son. I read them as a father, not as a boy. And maybe that is why I protect them the way I do. Because they are not just a story I grew up with. They are a story I grew into. I protect them the way you protect a pearl inside a shell. Closed. Untouched. Not because the pearl is fragile. Because the pearl is perfect. And every hand that opens the shell, no matter how careful, risks scratching what was already complete.

    I do not need an eighth story. I do not need a new cast. I do not need a reimagining. I need the seven books to stay exactly as they are. Protected. Whole. Canon.

    Some chapters are better left untouched. And any addition should be ripped and thrown out.

    Write in the logbook
  • Tools to Cheat Life

    Typographic lighthouse illustration on aged parchment, made from repeated fantasy spell words, character names, magical icons, and a small rowing boat formed from the word “Always.”
    June 19, 2026

    JK Rowling gave Voldemort seven Horcruxes to cheat death. She gave us eight tools to cheat life. She was always more generous with us than with him.

    She did not just create a world. She created objects, spells, and potions that solve problems our world cannot solve. You definitely have imagined using them. In your dreams. In your daydreams. In your stories. Or if you are like me, in your adventures. Everyone has used them. I know.

    The Pensieve. A stone basin where memories are pulled from the temple like silver threads and stored. They stay. They wait. They can be walked through and relived exactly as they happened.

    If we had it, we would sit beside the people we are losing and pull the threads before they disappear. Before the names go. Before the faces blur. Before the story stops halfway because the second half already left. And they would use it too. Not for the big moments. For the small ones. The name of the grandchild who visits on Thursdays. The taste of the sandwiches they have had every morning. The face of the person standing in front of them who they know they should recognise but cannot. If we had it, forgetting would be a choice. Not a sentence.

    The Time-Turner. A small hourglass on a chain. Turn it and go back.

    If we had it, we would go back to the moment we chose the wrong job. The wrong partner. The wrong investment. The door we should have walked through but didn’t. Not to change the world. Just to change the one decision that changed ours. If we had it, regret would not exist. “What if” would not be a question. It would be a trip we could take.

    The Mirror of Erised. A mirror that shows not your reflection but your deepest desire.

    If we had it, we would stand in front of it on the days we question everything. Am I in the right place. Am I with the right person. Am I enough. The woman who wants a child would see one. The man who lost his purpose would see it standing behind him. The person whose heart wants something their mouth is too afraid to say would finally see it said. If we had it, clarity would not take years of confusion. We would look once and know.

    The Deluminator. A device that captures light from any source and releases it later. It guided Ron back to the people he loved when he was lost.

    If we had it, we would click it inside every room that mattered. The room with the person in darkness who cannot remember what light felt like. Click. Release the light from a day when they were happy. The room where a couple sits in silence that used to be conversation. Click. Release the light from the early days. The first trip. The first laugh. The room where a parent misses the child who grew up. Click. Release the light from the afternoon your son still held your hand in public. Before he stopped. Before he became too old. And if we were brave, we would point it at ourselves. Not to capture light from a room or a memory. But to find the light already inside us that forgot it was there. If we had it, we would carry our own light. And on the darkest night, release it and remember it was always ours.

    Obliviate. A spell that erases memory.

    If we had it, we would erase the phone call. The diagnosis. The accident. The suicide. The dark thoughts. The image that plays at 2am whether we ask for it or not. The thing we did to ourselves through choices we cannot undo. If we had it, trauma would have an off switch. And the thing that was done to us could be removed like a thread from a cloth and the cloth would stay whole.

    The Invisibility Cloak. A cloak that hides you from everyone and everything.

    If we had it. Well. I am not going to say what we would do with it. You already know. You already used it. I’m sure. Next tool.

    The Sorting Hat. A hat that reads your mind and tells you where you belong. Not what you want to be. Not what others expect. Where you actually belong.

    If we had it, the student who picked a major because their family chose it would finally hear the truth. The employee who has been in the wrong career for fifteen years and knows it every morning but cannot say it out loud would hear it said for them. The person caught between two cultures would know which one is home. The person who does not know if what they feel is love or habit would know whether to stay or leave. If we had it, we would sit down, it would read what is actually inside us, and it would say one word. Our house. Our truth. No debate. No second-guessing. No years of therapy to arrive at what a hat could tell us in four seconds.

    The Boggart. A creature that lives in dark spaces and takes the shape of whatever you fear most. The only way to defeat it is the spell Riddikulus. You point your wand at it and force your fear into something so ridiculous it loses its power.

    If we had it, we would face the boss we are terrified of and watch him turn into a clown. We would face the business we are too afraid to start and watch the rejection letter fold itself into a paper plane. We would face the family dinner where someone says “I told you so” and hear it come out in a squeaky voice. If we had it, fear would become funny. And funny things cannot keep you stuck.

    Eight tools. Eight wishes. All beautiful. All impossible.

    I have used every single one of them. In my head. In my adventures. I have seen what my world would look like if they were real. I have walked through it. I have lived in it. And every single time, I come back to the same conclusion.

    I would not use them.

    Not because I do not want to. I do. I do. I do. Every day. I do.

    But life is not something we shape. It shapes us. We are who we are because of our sins, our tragedies, our losses, our regrets, and the things we did not get a magical solution for.

    Without them, we learned how to make the right decision by first making the wrong one. How to repent by first falling. How to be content by first wanting everything. How to forget by first carrying. How to swim by first drowning. How to be numb by first feeling too much. How to hide by first being exposed. How to shine by first sitting in the dark. How to see colours by first living in grey. How to protect by first being unprotected. How to love by first losing. How to let go by first holding on too tight. How to notice patterns by first missing them. How not to assume by first being wrong about everyone. How to be kind by first being hurt. How to be optimistic by first expecting nothing and being surprised. How to be thankful by first losing what we took for granted. How to be patient by first being broken by waiting. How to create by first being empty. How to pray by first being lost. How to pray Istikhara by first not knowing which door to walk through.

    No Pensieve taught us that. No Time-Turner. No potion. No spell. No mirror. No hat.

    Just life. Doing what it does. Breaking us into the shape we were meant to become.

    Write in the logbook
  • Nimbus 2026 Review: Same Broom. New Sticker.

    Retro-style shopping webpage for the Nimbus 2026 broom on Lighthouse.com, showing a product image, price, search sidebar, and add-to-cart buttons.
    June 18, 2026

    The Nimbus 2026 is here. Smoked walnut handle. Dark bronze footrests. Sculpted teardrop tail. Gold inlay. Runes that glow amber when you mount it. It is the best-looking broom Nimbus has ever made. Design: 9/10. No argument.

    Now let me tell you what it actually does.

    The same thing as last year. The speed is identical to the Nimbus 2025. The turning radius is the same. The Firebolt is still faster and everyone knows it. Nimbus calls the bristles 3% more aerodynamic. They call it BristleFlex™. Three professional Quidditch players could not feel the difference. Speed: 6/10.

    The AI-Assisted Altitude Hold detects when you are about to lose control and corrects your trajectory. In testing, it corrected me into a tree. Twice. It then displayed a faint amber message along the handle: “Consider a slower approach.” The runes glowed while it insulted me. AI: 3/10.

    Battery life is quoted at nine hours. I got six. During a match, the broom entered Low Magic Mode and displayed: “Your Nimbus is feeling tired. Consider landing.” I was mid-match. Battery: 4/10.

    The old wand-tap charge has been replaced by a proprietary MagicPort™ connector sold separately for twelve Galleons. Apple did it with the headphone jack. Samsung did it with the charger. Nimbus is doing it with basic wand compatibility. Innovation is when you remove something that works and charge extra for the replacement. All of this for $299.99. Value: 5/10.

    Should you upgrade? No. Should you buy the Firebolt? Yes. Should you wait for the 2027? Also no. Same broom. New font on the logo.

    Harry rode a Nimbus 2000 in his first year. McGonagall gave it to him for free. Even she knew.

    Nimbus 2026
    $299.99
    Design 9 Speed 6 Battery 4 AI 3 Value 5
    6
    out of 10
    Gorgeous. Flies fine. Just like last year’s model. Buy the Firebolt.
    Write in the logbook
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