photographer's adventure 
“It is a peculiar part of the good photographer's adventure to know where luck is most likely to lie in the stream, to hook it, and to bring it in without unfair play and without too much subduing it.” 
 James Agee (American Writer and Critic, 1909-1955)
Be water 
Empty your mind! Be formless, shapeless, like water. If you put water into a bottle, it becomes the bottle. You fill it into a teapot, it becomes the teapot, fill it into cup, it becomes the cup. Now water can flow, or it can crash: Be water, my friend!"
(Bruce Lee, 1940-1973, in a TV Interview) 
This quote was left in my comments one time, on another water picture,  if I can dig it out I will give credit to the person who left the comment. 
Ah here is the credit to the quote goes to  Bockschuss: www.flickr.com/photos/herzogtum/
Water is 
Water is fluid, soft, and yielding. But water will wear away rock, which is rigid and cannot yield. As a rule, whatever is fluid, soft, and yielding will overcome whatever is rigid and hard. This is another paradox: what is soft is strong.
        -  Lao-Tzu (600 B.C.)
angels come 
The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us, and we see nothing but sand; the angels come to visit us, and we only know them when they are gone. 
- George Eliot
fluid and volatile 
There are no fixtures in nature. The universe is fluid and volatile. Permanence is but a word of degrees.
Ralph Waldo Emerson. (1803–1882). from:  Essays and English Traits.
The walk home in sepia 
"Why does the Labyrinth attract people? Because it is a tool to guide healing, 
deepen self-knowledge, and empower creativity. Walking the labyrinth clears
the mind and gives insight into the spiritual journey. It urges action. It calms people
in the throes of life transitions. It helps them see their lives in the context of a path,
a pilgrimage. They realize that they are not human beings on a spiritual path but
spiritual beings on a human path. To those of us who fell we have untapped gifts
to offer, it stirs the creative fires within us. To others who are in deep sorrow,
the walk gives solace and peace. The experience is different for everyone
because each of us brings different raw material to the labyrinth. We bring our
unique hopes, dreams, history, and longings of the soul."
- Dr. Lauren Artress, Walking a Sacred Path, p. 21
Memory Lane in Sepia 
Everybody needs his memories. They keep the wolf of insignificance from the door. ~Saul Bellow
photographer's adventure 
“It is a peculiar part of the good photographer's adventure to know where luck is most likely to lie in the stream, to hook it, and to bring it in without unfair play and without too much subduing it.” 
 James Agee (American Writer and Critic, 1909-1955)
The walk home in sepia 
"Why does the Labyrinth attract people? Because it is a tool to guide healing, 
deepen self-knowledge, and empower creativity. Walking the labyrinth clears
the mind and gives insight into the spiritual journey. It urges action. It calms people
in the throes of life transitions. It helps them see their lives in the context of a path,
a pilgrimage. They realize that they are not human beings on a spiritual path but
spiritual beings on a human path. To those of us who fell we have untapped gifts
to offer, it stirs the creative fires within us. To others who are in deep sorrow,
the walk gives solace and peace. The experience is different for everyone
because each of us brings different raw material to the labyrinth. We bring our
unique hopes, dreams, history, and longings of the soul."
- Dr. Lauren Artress, Walking a Sacred Path, p. 21
photographer's adventure
“It is a peculiar part of the good photographer's adventure to know where luck is most likely to lie in the stream, to hook it, and to bring it in without unfair play and without too much subduing it.”
James Agee (American Writer and Critic, 1909-1955)
photographer's adventure 
“It is a peculiar part of the good photographer's adventure to know where luck is most likely to lie in the stream, to hook it, and to bring it in without unfair play and without too much subduing it.” 
 James Agee (American Writer and Critic, 1909-1955)
photographer's adventure
“It is a peculiar part of the good photographer's adventure to know where luck is most likely to lie in the stream, to hook it, and to bring it in without unfair play and without too much subduing it.”
James Agee (American Writer and Critic, 1909-1955)
See photo in original gallery.
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