RE: Minimalism Happens at Night...
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I used to be obsessed with long exposure images of buildings, captured at night, to make it look like day. So much "space" is "empty" at night - it is full of things, but it is absent of people, and that absence makes it beautiful.
It is like driving on a road that is normally bumper to bumper during rush hour, but completely deserted by 7PM. It takes on a different, sort of sublime character. That the space wasn't meant for the peak, it was meant for the lull.
And I find joy and beauty in that still.
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Be alone (which is not the same as being lonely) could make such a different, you know? One can be a better thinker, a quite good writer and mostly a efficient observer. Thank you @holoz0r
When you have to fill in the gaps of sense an observation with your mind, that's when the magic happens. Reading between the lines, seeing something in the shadows that isn't really there, (or was, just not obviously so) - and learning to be comfortable with yourself. (As opposed to being, as you said, by yourself.)
Let's be ourselves... Our time here is extremely short. It's my prerogative to not allow things affect me. I chose and recommend minimalism as a whole