In contrast to the linear, transactional concept of time that we are conditioned to follow (characterized by urgency, accumulation, and relentless forward motion), nature's time unfolds in cycles. It returns, remembers, and rests. Consider the seed that endures through drought, the tree that takes a century to fall, and the moss that silently creeps across stone.
This temporal rhythm is not measured by productivity but by transformation. It honors decay as much as it does bloom. It embraces slowness, even dormancy, as essential phases in the life cycle of things.
These works becomes a subtle act of defiance. It serves as a quiet form of resistance against a culture characterized by speed, extraction, and spectacle.
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