The Echo of Footsteps
Why do we insist on measuring progress by the speed at which we leave our shadows behind? We live in an age that worships the velocity of the present, treating the past as a heavy coat to be discarded at the first sign of summer. Yet, there is a quiet, stubborn dignity in the things that refuse to accelerate. We often mistake the new for the necessary, forgetting that the foundation of every skyscraper is buried deep in the earth, silent and unmoving. Perhaps we are not moving forward at all, but merely circling a center we have long since forgotten how to inhabit. When the world rushes past in a blur of light and noise, the soul often finds itself reaching for the texture of something worn, something that remembers the weight of a human hand. If we were to stop running, would we find that the future we are chasing has been waiting for us in the quiet corners all along?

Fabrizio Bues has captured this tension beautifully in his image titled Old Transportation in a Modern City. It serves as a gentle reminder that even in the heart of a relentless metropolis, the past still walks among us. Does this scene make you feel like a traveler or a ghost?

(c) Light & Composition University
(c) Light & Composition University