It was one of my first seven days in the pharmacy... Not as a customer, but as a future pharmacist in training. When I revealed to one of the pharmacists that I saw myself in a pharmaceutical company after I got my degree rather than in a pharmacy, she told me...
Klara- I love the analogy of the invisible doorways. I'm always intrigued by the ability of how physical objects--real or imaginative--can create passageways that don't exist, haven't yet exist, or that we want to exist. Ancient architecture in Egypt is full of these analogies, and they're rightfully not ashamed of it. Decorative doors made to mimic a real one can be found all their ancient remains---representing afterlife, or the hopes thereof. Your writing is a great reminder of this.
Thalia, thank you for this view. Into something entirely foreign to me and yet I enjoy the connections you have described. For some reason, I have a high affinity to doors and doorways and use them a lot, both in illustration and my writing. To me, they represent a portal between worlds and realities.
Klara- I love the analogy of the invisible doorways. I'm always intrigued by the ability of how physical objects--real or imaginative--can create passageways that don't exist, haven't yet exist, or that we want to exist. Ancient architecture in Egypt is full of these analogies, and they're rightfully not ashamed of it. Decorative doors made to mimic a real one can be found all their ancient remains---representing afterlife, or the hopes thereof. Your writing is a great reminder of this.
I see you have your own way of weaving art and storytelling in your Story Arks. Your kind of beautiful.
Thalia, thank you for this view. Into something entirely foreign to me and yet I enjoy the connections you have described. For some reason, I have a high affinity to doors and doorways and use them a lot, both in illustration and my writing. To me, they represent a portal between worlds and realities.