I am a huge fan of parks. I love how they are a great place for people to sit down and relax, have a picnic, or just let go of their worries. I also enjoy going to parks with my family and I know that it helps our family have a “normal” day. However, the same can’t be said about our bodies.
It seems like we don’t have enough space in our bodies, and parks can be a great way to get more space (and, in fact, are one of the most effective ways to do it). While most parks are designed to make you feel physically comfortable, parks also provide an escape from reality.
Parks are an escape from reality, but also an escape to boredom. I know many people who have never actually been to a park or even just the idea of going to a park. It’s always seemed like an adventure, and a sense of adventure, but it’s been a struggle for me to just let go and sit in a park or park with my family.
I am a true believer that parks can be a place where we can escape reality and focus on being more present in our minds, instead of focusing on our surroundings. With parks, I think we can learn to be more present, and that means not only being more present with ourselves but also with each other.
I think this is the first park I’ve ever visited where the idea that you need to be totally present to be at ease in a park is new to me. And I would argue that the same is true for most people who actually live in a park, and park life is not that different from our everyday lives.
I’ve always felt that it was a very nice thing to be in a park, but that it’s really only nice if we can be completely present with the people around us. And for me personally this means that I need to stop taking my phone everywhere, and more importantly, that I need to stop thinking about all the things I take photos of throughout the day.
I think this is really just a matter of personal preference. I think it’s nice to take photos of different things, and I like to keep them around because they’re a reminder of life in general, but I think the whole idea of taking photographs of life (and other people) is very much dependent on your own personal philosophy.
Personally, I can see how taking photos of a park or a street or a parkway or something like that could be distracting and a poor use of your time in a way, but, to each his own.
I have a lot of times been in a park and found myself wondering, “What am I doing here?” It’s like, “WTF?!” And then I would see the other person and think, “Wow, you must be bored!” and I’d be like “No I’m serious!” At first I was like, “But you’re at my park.