The echo of oblivion
This place is much more than just a physical space. It is not merely a forgotten structure or a set of walls deteriorated by the passage of time. It is as if time, at some point, had decided to stop completely, to remain still, and leave everything suspended in a kind of eternal pause. Once upon a time, there was life here. There was movement, voices, footsteps echoing, glances exchanged, shared learning, stories in the making. But now... now there is only silence.
And it is not just any silence. It is a silence that weighs heavily, that can be felt, that watches you from the corners. Because the abandonment that inhabits this place is not only physical. It is not just about the peeling walls, the broken desks, the accumulated dust, or the vegetation that is beginning to creep through the cracks. It is a deeper abandonment, more difficult to name. It is an existential abandonment. It is as if, by ceasing to be inhabited, this place had also ceased to belong to the world. As if, little by little, it had faded from collective memory, disappearing from everyone's daily history.
And that is when the dark corridors, the closed classrooms, the furniture piled up without order or meaning, become symbols. They are no longer mere forgotten objects, but clear signs of oblivion. Marks of a time that has passed, of an interest that has died, of stories that have faded away without ceremony, without farewell. One senses that something important happened here... and that no one stayed to tell the tale.
Because abandonment, in reality, is not simply the absence of people. It is something more complex, more dense. It is a presence in itself. It is a kind of shadow laden with everything that once was. A thick atmosphere that envelops the place with a silent nostalgia. It is like a dull, persistent echo of something that time left behind without asking permission, without considering whether anyone still needed it. And that echo still resonates, even if we don't notice it at first glance.
Walking through these spaces is not like walking through a dead place. It is, rather, like walking through a frozen memory. Through a time capsule that no one prepared, but that remained there, resisting. Everything is still, but not empty. Every corner seems to hold a story. Every shadow seems to whisper something. As if the very air were charged with suspended memories. Of conversations that were once heard within these walls. Of laughter, of learning, of conflicts, of dreams, of routines.
And when one enters those classrooms in ruins, where the desks no longer hold notebooks, where the blackboards are covered in dust and oblivion, there is a feeling that is difficult to explain. Everything that happened here simply fell silent. But that silence is not empty. It is not nothingness. It is density. It is weight. It is a silence filled with what was once full of life.
That silence does not need words to speak. It expresses itself with every crack, with every overturned chair, with every piece of furniture covered in cobwebs. It reminds us that history is still there, even if no one is looking at it. That places feel when we no longer need them. That spaces also bear scars.
And then, one understands that one is not alone in that place. Because, even if there is no one physically there, there are presences. There are memories. There is something that lives in what once was. Something that still, amid the dust and shadows, waits to be heard.
Thank you for coming this far and accompanying me on this journey through a place that, although forgotten by many, continues to speak in silence.
I hope this publication has managed to convey not only what my eyes saw, but also what my soul felt as I walked among those walls laden with memory.
Sometimes, listening to the silence of spaces is a way of honoring what they were... and what they still are for those who remember them.
Muy bueno bro!, Me alegra que tengas otros talentos, aquí en Venezuela no podemos dejar de sacar provecho a todo lo que sea un beneficio para nosotros. Yo también he aprendido mucho con las comunidades de fotos de Hive, hay otras además de estas, no dudes en explorarlas...