A pano i made on yesterdays foggy morning walk. Hope you like it!
"I can feel the sorrow build inside my mind. The purpose exists at the price I had to pay.
Freedom! Freedom!
Is this the life I had to live? I pretend there's nothing to complain about. Am I locked in a circle that can't be broken? Or is it just a paled, empty dream?"
theres just something awsome about this. very nice composition! i cant decide whether or not the focal point is the tree on the right hemisphere or the the foggy uknown in the background. everything is pulling the eyes towards the background. the windbreak of trees in the left hemisphere seems to act as a slope for the eyes to fall into and slide down to the background. the trees in the right hemisphere have the same affect, but are slightly different in that when you go from right hemisphere to foggy background, you feel lost and confused about where to focus your attention. vertigo! this affect is quite appropriate after reading the lovely little poem in the discription box. what the photo says to me is this: the fog speaks of the infinite realm of the unknown that is always there for us...offering to those who suffer from wanderlust, one of the side affects of an empircal mind, something new, something more meaningfull than the current condition and substance of life. the tree in the right hemisphere represents the niche we all have in life, whether it be in the psychical world of the mind, or the physical/spacial realm without. this uncertainty in which direction to go in is unavoidable. it is a part of the constant flux of life energies that make us humans who and what we are. a child does not take the first step without first understanding the concept of waling, then developing muscle strength, courage, and then a good sense of ballance. we draw information from the unkown and make sense of it by creating idea constructs, that themselves may or may not keep growing, and also aid in the production of new constructs. so you see, feeling lost is part of what makes us human. if you gander at this beautifull work and do not feel anxious, you are either not looking close enough or you are enlightened. lol. just kidding...about the latter. what we ought to truly fear is that which we think we know.
theres just something awsome about this. very nice composition! i cant decide whether or not the focal point is the tree on the right hemisphere or the the foggy uknown in the background. everything is pulling the eyes towards the background. the windbreak of trees in the left hemisphere seems to act as a slope for the eyes to fall into and slide down to the background. the trees in the right hemisphere have the same affect, but are slightly different in that when you go from right hemisphere to foggy background, you feel lost and confused about where to focus your attention. vertigo! this affect is quite appropriate after reading the lovely little poem in the discription box. what the photo says to me is this: the fog speaks of the infinite realm of the unknown that is always there for us...offering to those who suffer from wanderlust, one of the side affects of an empircal mind, something new, something more meaningfull than the current condition and substance of life. the tree in the right hemisphere represents the niche we all have in life, whether it be in the psychical world of the mind, or the physical/spacial realm without. this uncertainty in which direction to go in is unavoidable. it is a part of the constant flux of life energies that make us humans who and what we are. a child does not take the first step without first understanding the concept of waling, then developing muscle strength, courage, and then a good sense of ballance. we draw information from the unkown and make sense of it by creating idea constructs, that themselves may or may not keep growing, and also aid in the production of new constructs. so you see, feeling lost is part of what makes us human. if you gander at this beautifull work and do not feel anxious, you are either not looking close enough or you are enlightened. lol. just kidding...about the latter. what we ought to truly fear is that which we think we know.
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