"Some vistas are shrouded in darkness, others downright embody it. Yet much as color is not always a harbinger of goodness, the absence thereof need neither be an ill omen. Walking upon an isle such as this, I would feel solemn and somber, and would feel moved to recall those I have lost, not just in sadness, but in the warmth of my memories of them in the fulness of their lives, knowing that the world outside my mind respectfully declines to tempt my focus with bright distractions."
"There is an incredible sense of freedom and endlessness to wide open spaces, if only we are willing to look up. Most of us spend so much of our time indoors and in crowded overbuilt urban centres that even if we raise our gaze towards the heavens, the sky seems little more than an imposing neighbour who is more tolerated than welcome. Yet when neither ceilings, towers, trees, or mountains conspire to obscure what always lies above, we need not even raise our heads very high to realize we are surrounded by the beginnings of infinity, clinging to a cosmically minor, if blessed, spherical rock."
"I love these ones that seem to straddle the line between plain realism and something just a little beyond. The hints of blue are not fundamentally inconceivable as natural colours, but were I strolling through woods with such a blue colour to them, it would feel decidedly unorthodox and remarkable for it!"
"What a breathtaking scene, even without needing to stretch past the limits of real-world plausibility. I think whether from a canoe, a boat or ship of some sturdier construction, or some enchanting little cabin on an unseen opposing shore, beholding a sight such as this would give birth to a lifelong memory that would never be forgotten."
"Is it a mere dust devil guilded by strange mirage, a phased transdimensional structure soon to shift out of reality, an atmospheric omen of fair or ill fate to soon come, or perhaps a Djinn or some other mythic creature of forgotten lore?"
Quotes bt Daïm Aggott-Hönsch
Curated by Carballeira
Now pick your own words. What does it tell you?