It was an engineer of French origin and named Jacques Vallée, who invented the term Magonia to refer to that metaphorical alternative universe from which a series of alternative phenomena would come, such as those mysterious waves of UFO sightings, which were especially intense in the decade of the eighties of the last century XX.
Around that time, more or less, two doctors, Raymond Moody and Elizabeth Kübler-Ross, also stood out, making known to the world the supposed near-death experiences, where some of their patients agreed that they saw themselves outside the body, going through a dark tunnel at the end of which an intense light awaited them, giving them a feeling of peace and tranquility such as they had never known.
And I also have a friend, who lives in a small town in the Lleida Pyrenees, where nothing ever happens, except for the occasional commercial plane, whose volteric objectivity leads him to consider all these issues with the derogatory nickname of magufias: that is, nonsense .
As a well-known medieval mercenary once said, I neither remove nor put a king, but so that what the incredulous Thomas did not happen to me, it will never occur to me to say that: I will not drink this water.
NOTICE: Both the text and the photographs that accompany it are my exclusive intellectual property and therefore are subject to my Copyright.
Love the light in these!
Thanks, my friend
The title of your post is a phrase widely used today that refers to the vaccine against covid 19, but your photos seem to me that they fit more
Actually, it is a very old phrase, which has always been used more or less like that one that says that God squeezes, but does not drown. And of course, it is also very appropriate to imply that progress is being made in the fight against Covid-19, which translates into hope for the world ... whoever we find afterwards.
yip, agreed 🖖🏼😎🤙🏼
Thanks, friend
It is also the one that I like the most, although you can get a lot of play out of the lanterns, even seeing them through the canvas formed by the awnings that are all over the Plaza Mayor. Thank you very much for your comment and warm greetings
I think the frames and scenes are relatively easy to play with. In that sense, I can assure you that this type of place (a Plaza Mayor) and even the cloisters of the great monasteries, are very suitable for experimenting with all kinds of light and shadow effects, frames and angles that they give to photographs. other perspectives. Also, if you are interested in frames, the ruins often offer some interesting sights to speculate on. Greetings