Decision Insight

Operational intelligence
Interactive consideration
Various possibilities

Adoption of resolutions, formal clues indicating divergent destinations stream overhead in a rapid framework. Autonomy and discretion are indispensable when engaged in flexible adaptability, and choice is essential to sovereignty and autonomy.

“The universe has no fixed agenda. Once you make any decision, it works around that decision. There is no right or wrong, only a series of possibilities that shift with each thought, feeling, and action that you experience.” – Deepak Chopra

Equanimity

Extended sense
General harmony
Calm mental state

Tangible realities in a naturalized world, certain environmental locations and associated circumstances elicit universal thoughts. Accepting existence does not require a decisive explanation.

“As mindfulness calms our emotions, we can peer into their depths and see our overshadowing spiritual values reflected on the surface.” – Michael Benner

Transit Corridor

Surface route
Common course
Linear agglomeration

At close range, trees border many roadways in the eastern states, stimulating feelings of confinement even when traveling at high speed.

“There’s more to getting to where you’re going then just knowing there’s a road.” – Joan Lowery Nixon

Outfitters

Urban adventure
Retail environment
Accommodation experience

To support trend conformance, prescribed hipster vibe for sale.

“Habit rules the unreflecting herd.” – William Wordsworth

Partial Event Complex

Abstract stretch
Directly exhibited
Simultaneous derivative

Spatial and temporal relations disclosed in immediate awareness can become tangled under reflective conditions. Here the reflecting experience encounters something necessitating a prior self acquaintance.

“When left alone, quantum particles behave as multiple images of themselves (as waves, really), simultaneously moving through all possible paths in space and time.” – Christophe Galfard

No Matter

Surface energy
Color resources
Quaint distinctions

Tracing radiation across a retail strip-mall at dusk covers the world in virtual brush strokes. Expanding the performative aspect in splendored action, a mediated painting does not necessarily require paint.

“I paint my own reality. The only thing I know is that I paint because I need to, and I paint whatever passes through my head without any other consideration.” – Frida Kahlo

Dawn Shine

Morning light
Summer wind
Early riser

When walking on the beach through the crack of dawn, aligning with the cosmic currents of existence seems more possible. By the process of experience coupled with introspection, a meaningful existence emerges from a sensitive temperament in touch with the natural world.

“At the beach, life is different. Time doesn’t move hour to hour but mood to moment. We live by the currents, plan by the tides and follow the sun.” – Sandy Gingras

Algae Scum

Various genera
Visible colonies
Aquatic ecosystem

In the summertime, many bodies of water in the temperate zone contain a population of algae, appearing as coloration in the water from associated pigments. These can be scummy and look like paint spilled on the surface of the water.

“Innumerable microscopic algae help anchor aquatic ecosystems; they turn sunlight into food, and themselves serve as food for water-dwelling frogs, fish, snails, and insects.” – Marion Renault

York River

Fossil beach
Shoreline tree
Coastal estuary

Straddling the brackish water’s edge, this sandy soil station seems an unlikely location for such an isolated tree.

“Their leaves are telling secrets. Their bark sings songs of olden days as it grows around the trunks. And their roots give names to all things.” – Vera Nazarian

Pelecanidae

Circle high
Coastal waters
Headfirst plunge

Diving pelicans learn that a steep dive angle, ranging from between 60 and 90 degrees, reduces aiming errors due to water surface refraction. Located on their breasts just beneath the skin, air sacs act as cushions to avoid injury from surface forces on impact.

“The brown pelican usually plunge-dives head-first for its prey, from a height as great as 33–66 ft, especially for anchovies and menhaden.” – Andrew Elliott

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