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The tide is coming in. Off in the distance, I see young swells building, aging, ignorant of whats to come. Using the ocean floor like a springboard to launch itself into a force to be reckoned with. All these individual elements, the ocean's collective energy divided among its waves; fractals of something much larger. In their greatest moment, they come crashing down, seemingly ceasing to exist. I stand on the shore, a bystander, observing the energy return to the source, ripples being created from the death of waves. Their relevance lasting as long as the shores remain stained. And in this moment, I feel better about my own mortality; knowing that my relevance doesn't end when my body dies, that my energy just goes to feed the swell of another wave to come. And I remain a pillar, unmoved.
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Feb 20, 2017
Feb 20, 2017 at 9:46 AM UTC
The Life and Death of Waves
The tide is coming in. Off in the distance, I see young swells building, aging, ignorant of whats to come. Using the ocean floor like a springboard to launch itself into a force to be reckoned with. All these individual elements, the ocean's collective energy divided among its waves; fractals of something much larger. In their greatest moment, they come crashing down, seemingly ceasing to exist. I stand on the shore, a bystander, observing the energy return to the source, ripples being created from the death of waves. Their relevance lasting as long as the shores remain stained. And in this moment, I feel better about my own mortality; knowing that my relevance doesn't end when my body dies, that my energy just goes to feed the swell of another wave to come. And I remain a pillar, unmoved.
chase-gallagher
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Feb 20, 2017
Feb 20, 2017 at 9:46 AM UTC
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