Friday, August 12, 2011

Celebrate Life


21 handpicked, meaningful photos for my 21st birthday.
There are just so many things to celebrate, to be grateful for. O:)

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Un Año De Retratos

So I finally gave in and started my own 365, and I just reached the one week mark today! For those of you who have no idea what it is, the 365 project is a photography project where you document a year of your life by taking a daily photo.
Today's 365: At your fingertip.
I know it's tough. I know there will be days when taking a picture will be more of a burden than something to look forward to, but I'm hoping to see this through 'til the end. I believe it can help me become more imaginative, more resourceful. Take this photo for instance:
6/365: Solubility
Not everyone would realize that I used povidone-iodine instead of an actual dye. Did you? I'm looking forward to more spontaneity, and definitely more creativity. Join me as I embark in this exciting--albeit a bit scary--journey of photographs and daily musings. :) 

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Gray Matter


I had no idea what Kazuo Ishiguro's "Never Let Me Go" was about when I decided to buy it. The usually informative synopsis at the back gave nothing away this time. And although I was a bit shaken up upon connecting the dots, and although I did hesitate to go on, I just knew it was a story I needed to read, an issue I needed to acknowledge.

I pride myself on being an open-minded person, but like any other erring human, I have my own sets of prejudice. 

Ethics vs. Welfare. Objectively, it's easy to pick ethics, I know. I would have picked it myself. But this book made me realize that there are some things that cannot be looked at objectively. That not all things can be distinguished as either black or white. That what's right isn't always what's best.

I think every one of us had fought that battle at least once in our lives: that battle between doing what the society thinks is right and what we think is--if not right--best for us. It's easy to talk, really. It's easy to judge and put your two cents in. It's so easy to say, "That's just so wrong" or "What a horrible person he is" without considering what the offender was thinking, or what his reason was. And it's not fair. It's not fair to take sides without even acknowledging that there are two sides, or without realizing that maybe there is a middle ground. After all, gray is neither black nor white.