Home Reflections The Weight of a Thousand Windows

The Weight of a Thousand Windows

To look down from a great height is to lose the individual. Below, the city becomes a circuit board of cold light, a nervous system pulsing in the dark. We imagine that behind every glow there is a life, a kitchen table, a book left open, a silence shared between two people. But from here, the human scale vanishes. We are reduced to the rhythm of the grid. It is a strange comfort, this distance. It suggests that our own small anxieties are merely part of a larger, flickering pattern that does not require our permission to continue. We are not the architects of this light; we are only the observers of its persistence. When the night is deep enough, the city stops feeling like a place of stone and steel. It feels like a map of things we have forgotten to say to one another. What happens to the heat of a room when the lights are finally extinguished?

Tokyo at Night by Bappa Goswami

Bappa Goswami has taken this beautiful image titled Tokyo at Night. It captures the vast, electric pulse of a city that never truly sleeps. Does the scale of such a place make you feel more connected, or more alone?