One Day Experiment
Introduction:
During the day, many things happen to us in many levels, whether it is about the weather, work, games or relationships..etc. But we rarely tend to relate each to the other, and we always pass by things we no longer realize or pass by people we don't know even though we look at them or check their clothes. Many details but less care.
Tools:
All senses
Brain
Ingredients:
All the day's "things" from events to insignificant details.
Experiment:
1.Try to put them together as if someone wrote a film script for you to act, sensing that each detail is worth the sight of you and each wall worth the touch from you each person you pass by you relate to.
2.Try to find reason for whatever you pass by, even silly or ironic ones would do.
3.Try to relate the the unknown person you passed by with another event happened to you the same day, not in comparative manner but in sets of reasoning.
2.Try to find reason for whatever you pass by, even silly or ironic ones would do.
3.Try to relate the the unknown person you passed by with another event happened to you the same day, not in comparative manner but in sets of reasoning.
Caution:
The whole experiment won't be valid if you reflect the happenings to affect you, you're not a part of what you see, what i mean is, look around you not in yourself, and relate things to each other not to your mood or feelings. It is a brain activity, once the heart enter you may not put things in control. The intention of this experiment is not to feel differently than think differently, which makes you feel good after doing it.
Time Dictation
never too late
later
either now or never
since when
for how long
never
too late
when
now
then
while
a while
once upon a time
once
it is the time
with time
future
to-morrow
tomorrow is another day
yesterday (literal)
yesterday (metaphor of past)
half past five
at five in the afternoon
around five
sharp twelve
reference
five to eight
eleven past eleven
twenty four
early
more than an hour
waiting
waited
time stop
back in time
childhood
what time is it?
memorize
just in time
dynasty
constant
continuous
infinite
finite
phase
period
moment
instantly
frequently
timely
today
at the moment
just
tonight
only an hour
always
usually
time to time
sometimes
past time
slow
timetable
time line
time reference
time code
domain
shutter speed
time exposure
time frame
limit
time out
zero
time travel
time warp
time zone
time shift
fast
timeless
timekeeper
timescale
until
still
till
before
after
timeshare
someday
somehow
everyday
each day
time cycle
timer
motion
later
either now or never
since when
for how long
never
too late
when
now
then
while
a while
once upon a time
once
it is the time
with time
future
to-morrow
tomorrow is another day
yesterday (literal)
yesterday (metaphor of past)
half past five
at five in the afternoon
around five
sharp twelve
reference
five to eight
eleven past eleven
twenty four
early
more than an hour
waiting
waited
time stop
back in time
childhood
what time is it?
memorize
just in time
dynasty
constant
continuous
infinite
finite
phase
period
moment
instantly
frequently
timely
today
at the moment
just
tonight
only an hour
always
usually
time to time
sometimes
past time
slow
timetable
time line
time reference
time code
domain
shutter speed
time exposure
time frame
limit
time out
zero
time travel
time warp
time zone
time shift
fast
timeless
timekeeper
timescale
until
still
till
before
after
timeshare
someday
somehow
everyday
each day
time cycle
timer
motion
Lens

"A Nest -and this we understand right away- is a precarious thing, and yet it sets us to daydreaming of security" ~Gaston Bachelard in The Poetics of Space.
"What we call chaos is just patterns we haven't recognized. What we call random is just patterns we cant decipher. What we can't understand we call nonsense. What we can't read we call gibberish. There is no free will. There are no variables. There is only the inevitable." ~ Chuck Palanhiuk
Blossom Day
The Letter that was Instantly Read.
Physiognomy
Physiognomy (Gk. physis, nature and gnomon, judge, interpreter) is a theory based upon the idea that the assessment of the person's outer appearance, primarily the face, may give insights into one's character or personality. The term physiognomy can also refer to the general appearance of a person, object or terrain, without reference to its implied or scientific characteristics.[i attended the mogul painting lecture in Dar Al-Athar and it was so wonderful -i must say it is one of the greatest from this season-, the lecturer was Goswami's student who is one of the great readers of Indian Paintings whom i attended a really interesting workshop with him and some of the cultural center friends. in the formerly mentioned lecture, she showed us a couple of portraits in which she referred to this field of knowledge to describe. i never heard of it and i was interested! this is its definition i'm very willing to know more about it]




