One of the strangest things about being human is that we can get used to almost anything.
The noise.
The stress.
The rushing.
The pressure.
After a while, it stops feeling strange and starts feeling normal.
Sometimes growth begins when you stop asking:
"How do I cope with this?"
and start asking:
"Should this feel normal in the first place?"
Life can't feel so incredibly lonely.
You wait and wait that one day once again someone will apesr.
Someone who would genuinely care and you would feel seen by that person.
Someone who would hear you out and not and not judge you.
You would talk and listen and you would put word right once again.
Why we was able to do it for each other back then?
and not anymore.?
Is it middle age thing?
or is it just something what is normal those days for all generations ?
Why growing up in 90 ies felt like every so often you would meet someone even stranger and you would feel truly seen and not judged by. You would talk and talk and whole world would make sence once again.
Why not anymore?
Photography became faster.
But its deeper purpose may have stayed the same from the very beginning:
To briefly stop time…
before life keeps moving again.
Humans accidentally discovered the foundation of photography thousands of years before cameras existed.
They noticed something strange:
If light entered a dark cave or room through a tiny hole…
the outside world appeared projected upside down onto the wall.
Trees.
Mountains.
People.
Movement.
Reality itself was being recreated using nothing but light. 🧵
Yet photography still carries something timeless and deeply human.
The desire to say:
“This mattered.”
“I was here.”
“This existed.”
“Please don’t let this disappear completely.”
Maybe that’s why old photographs can feel haunting.
They don’t only capture faces.
They capture:
• lost worlds
• vanished streets
• forgotten rooms
• people who are gone
• younger versions of ourselves we can never fully return to
Most people think exhaustion comes from doing too much.
But sometimes exhaustion comes from:
holding too much inside yourself.
Unspoken feelings.
Suppressed anger.
Pressure to appear “fine.”
Trying to be who everyone expects you to be.
That drains people more than they realise.
The strangest part?
Entire conversations, songs, maps, videos, and signals are moving around you right now invisibly.
Your radio doesn’t “create” music from nowhere.
It translates invisible energy your ears were never designed to detect.
Why does your car radio start at 87.5 MHz instead of 0?
At first glance it feels random.
But the real reason reveals something fascinating about how invisible waves shape the modern world. 🧵
And here’s something most people don’t know:
Some Japanese radios start around 76 MHz instead of 87.5 MHz.
So imported Japanese cars sometimes can’t receive all UK stations.
The radio isn’t broken.
It was designed for a different slice of the spectrum.