The Japanese Maple (Acer palmatum) is a deciduous tree known for its beautiful and intricate foliage, which changes colors throughout the seasons. Here are some key points about this tree:
Appearance
Leaves: Japanese Maple leaves are deeply lobed, typically with five to nine lobes, and have a delicate, lacy appearance. They change colors with the seasons, ranging from green to vibrant reds, oranges, and purples.
Size: These trees can vary in size from small shrubs to small trees, usually growing between 10 to 25 feet tall, though some varieties can be smaller or larger.
Bark: The bark is generally smooth and can be a variety of colors, often a light gray or green when young, maturing to gray-brown.
Varieties
There are numerous cultivars of Japanese Maple, each with its unique characteristics. Some popular varieties include:
Acer palmatum ‘Atropurpureum’: Known for its dark purple leaves.
Acer palmatum ‘Dissectum’: Features finely cut, feathery leaves.
Acer palmatum ‘Sango-kaku’: Noted for its striking coral-red bark.
Growing Conditions
Light: Japanese Maples prefer partial shade but can tolerate full sun, especially in cooler climates. In hotter regions, they benefit from some afternoon shade.
Soil: They thrive in well-drained, slightly acidic soil rich in organic matter.
Watering: Regular watering is essential, especially during dry periods. However, they do not like waterlogged conditions.
Care
Pruning: Prune to maintain shape and remove any dead or damaged branches. It is best done in late winter or early spring.
Mulching: Mulch around the base to retain moisture and keep the roots cool.
Fertilizing: Fertilize in early spring with a balanced fertilizer to promote healthy growth.
Uses
Japanese Maples are highly valued in gardens for their aesthetic appeal. They are often used as focal points in landscaping, bonsai, and container gardening. Their beautiful foliage and graceful form make them a popular choice for adding elegance and color to any garden setting.
Symbolism
In Japanese culture, the maple tree symbolizes grace, elegance, and serenity. It is often associated with peace and beauty, making it a beloved feature in traditional Japanese gardens.
Potential Issues
Pests: Aphids, scale insects, and spider mites can be occasional problems.
Diseases: Susceptible to fungal diseases like Verticillium wilt and powdery mildew.
Environmental Stress: They can be sensitive to extreme heat, strong winds, and salt, which can cause leaf scorch or other damage.
Japanese Maples are treasured for their ornamental beauty and the tranquil presence they bring to gardens and landscapes around the world.
What’s popping, people? Over the past year, I’ve been practicing meditation with a Japanese toy called the Kendama. This simple wooden toy, consisting of three cups, a spike, and a ball attached by a string, has become a way for me to train my mind-body connection. It’s a technical skill that also has a creative side, requiring focus, patience, and coordination to perform various tricks by catching the ball in different cups or on the spike.
Practicing with the Kendama has surprisingly enhanced my approach to street photography, especially when I’m shooting with my Ricoh on a wrist strap. The experience has taught me to handle my camera with fluidity and spontaneity, creating images in a way that feels less controlled but more connected to my intuition.
Developing the Mind-Body Connection
Using the Kendama as a meditation tool helps me train my coordination and concentration, just like a street photographer training their eye and instinct. It’s all about the connectivity between mind, body, and spirit. When I’m out photographing, I often don’t even look through the viewfinder or LCD screen. Instead, I trust my movements, letting the camera flow with me as I move. The goal is to make photographs in a way that is instinctive, allowing myself to be surprised by the results at the end of the day.
“Using the camera in this unconventional way requires a connectivity between mind, body, soul, and spirit.”
Letting Go and Embracing the Flow
Practicing with the Kendama has also taught me to let go of rigid control, focusing instead on flow and spontaneity. This approach has had a huge impact on my street photography. By walking, observing, and following my gut, I can master the craft in a more intuitive way.
“When you’re on the street, go slow and let life flow. Just let the chips fall as they may.”
With my camera on a wrist strap, the Ricoh becomes like the Kendama itself — there’s a parallel in the motion, the coordination, and the instinct required to make each move. This lets me approach street photography in a state of play, moving fluidly and being open to the unexpected.
Benefits for Hand-Eye Coordination and Handling
The hand-eye coordination I’ve developed from practicing with the Kendama has translated directly into my ability to handle my camera with ease. Whether I’m capturing an impromptu moment or quickly adjusting angles, the muscle memory from practicing with the Kendama comes into play.
“The more I practice Kendama, the better I become at handling my Ricoh.”
This mind-body connection isn’t just about physical skills. It’s about tuning into the moment, trusting my instincts, and embracing a playful, explorative approach to photography. With the Kendama, you’re always focused on the next move, just like in street photography, where each scene presents a new opportunity.
How Kendama Practice Benefits Street Photography
The experience of practicing Kendama has brought new elements to my street photography:
Improved hand-eye coordination, allowing for quick, instinctive camera handling.
Increased focus and patience, essential for capturing those fleeting street moments.
A mind-body connection, making each shot feel like an extension of myself.
A playful, open approach, letting me flow through the streets and capture life as it happens.
With the Kendama as my unexpected training tool, street photography has become even more immersive and spontaneous. By letting go, slowing down, and embracing this flow, I’m able to capture the streets in a way that’s true to myself. So, if you’re looking for a creative way to enhance your photography, maybe give the Kendama a try — it just might surprise you!
What’s poppin, people? It’s Dante. Today we’re going to be discussing Wabi Sabi street photography—what that means, how you can apply it to your own street photography, and why it’s so powerful.
The Philosophy of Wabi Sabi
On the cover of this slideshow is a photograph of a Japanese weeping tree.
I work in horticulture and tend these trees often. It’s meditative. You witness the way leaves wither, decay, and then bloom again. Nature is always in flux, always changing—and so are we.
“Wabi Sabi is about embracing the impermanent nature of life.”
What does Wabi Sabi mean?
Wabi — simplicity, humility, connection to nature
Sabi — the beauty of aging, wear, impermanence
Together: Wabi Sabi = Beauty in the imperfect, the impermanent, and the incomplete.
“Nothing lasts, nothing is finished, and nothing is perfect.”
We’re imperfect too—flesh and blood, bound by gravity, full of sorrow, greed, lust. And yet—our imperfection is perfection.
Photography in Flux
Here’s an image I made of peace lilies—one just beginning to bloom, another fully bloomed. Everything is changing. Everything is impermanent.
“Street photography is about finding meaning in the fleeting, in the things most people overlook.”
Like birds in flight at Penn’s Landing. Waves crashing behind them. A passing moment. Fleeting. Gone.
Why Practice Wabi Sabi Street Photography?
Because we already know too much about perfection. We’ve heard enough about sharpness, flawless exposures, megapixels.
Wabi Sabi reminds us:
“Perfection isn’t the goal.”
It’s about seeing the world raw, real, authentic, and spontaneous.
Look for:
Cracks
Rust
Peeling paint
Shadows and decay
Signs of life in the worn-out things
“Imperfection is perfection.”
Case Study: The Burning Car
I was walking in Philly, and I saw a car on fire. I was prepared—I made the shot.
That moment embodied Wabi Sabi. Everything in flux. Nothing lasts.
Let Life Flow Towards You
“Walk slower than everyone around you.”
When you’re walking the streets, don’t hunt. Don’t force it. Be ready. Let the street crash into you like a wave. Catch what’s there. That’s Wabi Sabi.
How to Photograph Wabi Sabi (Practical Tips)
Use Program or Macro Mode I love macro. Get close to the textures. Capture the dew on a leaf in the morning.
Stop overthinking. Trust your intuition. Let your eye lead. Feel the image before it happens.
Look for:
Worn leaves
Puddles
Faded walls
Rusted hinges
Human presence without the human
Carry your camera with you. Always. Let it be your companion in daily life. You’re not hunting—you’re living.
“Photography becomes a visual diary of your day.”
Black & White. High Contrast. Ricoh GR.
Black and white strips away distraction.
Crank the contrast to max.
Let the textures shine.
I use the Ricoh GR III. The macro feature is sublime. I shoot small JPEGs. That’s all you need. Keep it raw. Keep it simple.
You Don’t Need to Travel
“Wabi Sabi doesn’t require travel. It requires attention.”
I’ve photographed all over the world—from Mumbai to Mexico City, from Israel to Zambia. But lately?
A tattered poster inside the Wanamaker Building
A chain locked around a pole
Carved love notes on a tree
All in my backyard. All just around the corner.
Walk the Backstreets
Go where others don’t. Alleyways. Empty sidewalks. The slower you walk, the more you see.
“The more you see, the more you photograph. The more you photograph, the more curious you become.”
Photography as Meditation
When I’m shooting, I’m simply being.
“When I’m walking, I exist outside of time.”
Photography puts me in a Zen-like state. Watching the light. Watching the people move. Seeing everything.
I’ve never made more photos in my life since adopting this mindset.
No Goals. No Preconceived Notions.
You don’t need a theme. You don’t need a project. You don’t even need a plan.
Just wander. Just be. Just make.
It’s Not Just Cracks and Rust
Wabi Sabi isn’t just chipped paint. It’s the fleeting sunrise. The momentary breeze. The movement of birds. It’s transience itself.
Final Thoughts
“Maybe you can’t live forever—but you can make a photograph.” “Life is short. Art is forever.”
So remember:
Embrace the imperfect
Look for the overlooked
Photograph with soul
Let go of control
Treat the street like a mirror of your own impermanence. And let the photograph be your way of remembering what mattered.
What’s poppin people? It’s Dante. Going for my morning walk here in Fairmount Park, Philadelphia.
Welcome to the Horticulture Center. Got some new shoes — the Vivo Barefoot — so I can have a good work shoe and still maintain that barefoot lifestyle.
On Inspiration
Today I’m thinking about inspiration. Where I find it. How I find it. What it means to me. And why it matters.
Ultimately, I find inspiration everywhere around me.
In the details of the sticks and the trees
In the breeze that touches my skin
In that first fresh breath of air when I walk outside in nature
When you look at the word inspiration, inspirare, it means “to breathe into.” There’s this divine essence in the word that’s actually quite intriguing — where God breathes life into you as a being, as someone capable of creating.
“We too are the ultimate creators.”
Curiosity Over Motivation
You know, I think inspiration isn’t some external force pushing me. It’s an innate quality that comes from cultivating curiosity.
“It has nothing to do with some sort of external force. It’s about engaging with the multifaceted complexities of life.”
The sights, the sounds, the smells — all of your surroundings in the real world.
Nature is my ultimate source of inspiration. Because nature is in flux. Constantly changing.
Each day
Each season
Each second
Minute
Millisecond
There’s always something new. Something transforming. And that’s invigorating.
“There’s never going to be the same day twice.”
The Body and the Breath
Even our bodies reflect this change. Through fasting, autophagy, deep sleep, good meat — you literally become new. Cells regenerate. The body renews itself.
Motivation comes from movere — to move. It’s external. Physical. You feel it when lifting weights or walking.
Inspiration, though… That comes through you. It’s internal. Spiritual.
“Inspiration is something you can’t really perceive or describe. It comes from inside.”
The Wanamaker Organ ⛪
For two years, I listened to the Wanamaker Organ in Philadelphia.
Every day. 5:30 PM. Without fail.
I’d stand in the center of the building — high ceiling, surrounded by grand architecture, right in front of a bronze eagle sculpture. And I’d listen to the largest playing organ in the world.
“Music, sculpture, architecture — the trifecta of art.”
That’s what inspired me. The divine energy that filled that space. A space to transcend.
Rome, Caravaggio, and Chiaroscuro 🎨
I also found inspiration in Rome in 2023. I spent two months praying in churches, staring at Caravaggio’s paintings.
The light, the darkness, the biblical scenes… There’s something otherworldly in his use of chiaroscuro. Something that goes beyond beauty.
“There’s something sublime in Caravaggio’s paintings.”
Beauty surrounds us:
In the churches
In the paintings
In birds in flight
In Goethe’s sculpture
In the philosophers who shaped civilization
It’s all fuel for the soul.
Photo Books and Traveling Minds 📚✈️
Don’t get me wrong — a photo book can inspire you too. The best one I own? Larry Towell’s book on the Mennonites. It places you in another world. A whole new narrative.
A photo book might:
Inspire you
Motivate you
Encourage you to go outside
Travel
Move
But you don’t need to hop on a plane. You can travel within your mind. Or just walk your own neighborhood with fresh eyes.
“Contemplation is travel.”
Try standing on a rooftop. Cross a bridge. Go to the highest point in your city. Change your perspective — physically and mentally.
Elevation and the Horizon
I like to stand at an elevated perspective.
Looking over the river. Crossing the Benjamin Franklin Bridge. Peering toward the horizon.
“I remind myself how open the world is — how much there is to do, to see, to explore, and to photograph.”
Nature trail or city chaos — it doesn’t matter.
Wherever I go, I find inspiration.
Caravaggio → Metzker → Webb → Me 📷
Coming back to Caravaggio, I’ve been trying to bring that high-contrast light and shadow into my own photography.
That’s why I’ve been looking at Ray K. Metzker — a black-and-white photographer in Philadelphia. His work is otherworldly. Just on the aesthetic level alone.
“Some of the works that he’s made are just… beautiful in their innate quality.”
Alex Webb, one of my biggest inspirations, was inspired by Metzker. And I was inspired by Webb. So now I’m looking deeper — tracing the thread back to the source.
Webb → Metzker → Caravaggio → Light and Shadow → Church → Prayer → Music → Nature.
“I’m back at the source. The tree. The tree of life. What gives me breath.”
Full Circle 🌳
Without the trees, Without the breeze, Without the stillness of nature…
Maybe I wouldn’t even have the ability to create at all.
Maybe returning to nature is returning to the ultimate source of creation.
“Nature is my ultimate source of inspiration.”
Final Thoughts
So yeah, maybe some of these thoughts make sense to you. Maybe not. That’s cool too.
Just wanted to share what inspires me. How I cultivate inspiration in my everyday life. How I keep going.
Because inspiration, for me, comes from the walk.
And so I shall photograph it.
Beautiful pinecones. Just listen. Too much chatter in the city. Just listen.
Prune your diseased parts so you can bear good fruits.
Assume everyone is diseased?
If we assume that most people are diseased—imperfect, wounded, misled—which, in some sense, we all are, then maybe it’s best not to let others infect your spirit. Don’t let the sickness of another drag you down. Don’t absorb their rot.
We, as philosophers, are like spiritual doctors. But before we can heal others, we must heal ourselves.
That means turning inward. Facing the shadow. Cutting away the dead and diseased parts of ourselves.
And once we’ve done that—once we’ve been through the fire and come out cleaner, sharper, lighter—we can go out into the world and offer something good. Something nourishing. Something fruitful.
The Latin term otium signifies “leisure,” “free time,” or “peaceful inactivity.” In ancient Rome, otium held a positive connotation, denoting time away from public duties or business—time for intellectual pursuits, relaxation, and personal enjoyment. It was often seen as the counter to negotium, meaning “business” or “occupation” (literally, “non-leisure”).
Among the Roman elite, otium was highly prized as it fostered reflection, study, and the cultivation of the mind—a key element in achieving a balanced life. This Roman appreciation for leisure influenced later European perspectives on work-life balance, encouraging ideas about contemplation and personal fulfillment.
Redefining Leisure
When most people think of leisure, they envision relaxation, being outdoors, and enjoying the day. But true leisure isn’t just about resting—it’s about embracing the freedom to engage fully in activities, especially without the constraints of time or pressure.
Physical Leisure
For me, physical leisure is everything. During my morning walks, I carry a 40-pound weight vest for an hour, and that’s my leisure. This freedom to move my body in the open, without rushing or pressing for time, is liberating.
Leisure in Street Photography
I take the same approach in street photography. My photography is not forced—I walk the streets leisurely, letting moments unfold. Each day, I’m simply working toward new photographs without pushing for a particular result. It’s not about strict discipline or outcomes; it’s about savoring the process.
Enjoying the Process
Whether it’s photography or working out, avoid stressing over results. Don’t worry if a photograph is “good” or if you’re progressing fast enough in the gym. Focus instead on enjoying the journey, moving through each task with leisure and grace. When you immerse yourself in the process, the experience itself becomes rewarding.
Keeping It Simple
Life becomes easier when we simplify. For instance, when I’m out photographing, I use P mode on my camera. With a compact digital camera set on P mode, I can capture snapshots without stressing over settings or light conditions. Photography becomes a natural extension of my day, not an obligation.
Practical Tips for Leisure
Adopting a leisure approach in fitness is equally freeing. Your workouts don’t need to be elaborate. A home gym setup with simple equipment—push-up bars, a pull-up bar, and a weighted vest—is more than enough. Walking with a weighted vest is the best part of my day and the moment I look forward to most.
The Leisure Mindset
Leisure is more than relaxation—it’s a mindset that embraces ease in action. Finding joy in natural activities, doing what you love without pushing, and embracing the moment defines the leisure mindset.
Leisure Recap:
Otium: Embracing leisure as the Romans did, for balance and self-cultivation
Physical Leisure: Morning walks with a 40-pound vest for an hour
Street Photography: Taking photos leisurely without stress or forced results
Enjoy the Process: Focus on the journey rather than outcomes in any activity
Keep It Simple: Use P mode in photography for effortless snapshots
Fitness in Leisure: Simple home workouts—push-ups, pull-ups, and walking with a weighted vest
Leisure Mindset: Finding joy in each activity without pressure or
In 2020 I worked on the Biden campaign. I’ve experienced what it’s like to work in politics—always being on call, in meetings, talking to thousands of people—and ultimately felt extremely drained at the end of this experience. I had hardly any time to work on my personal photography, art, read, write, or do anything for myself. As an artist, I very much realize that this lifestyle, of negotium, or attending to business affairs, is absolutely not for me.
Follow Your Inner Child
Even when I worked as a photographer for the city, I found it extremely unfulfilling, because I had to make basic and boring portraits or pictures of events. This was around the time that I said to myself that it’s time for radical change, and just started shooting high contrast, black-and-white—basically putting a stamp on the timeline that says I’m now pursuing photography as an independent artist.
And so I’m sharing this with you today because I believe that maybe something I say—or just by simply sharing my personal journey—can inspire you to think radically different about how we approach life. I feel like life is the ultimate video game, and it’s up to you to decide how you wanna play the game. You don’t have to live by the same rules, guidelines, or strategies that other players adopted.
For instance, I worked as a Peace Corps volunteer in Zambia, simply due to my intuition telling me to do so—it was like my inner child who explored in the forest wanted to go for another adventure. I volunteered on a kibbutz in Israel and lived amongst a Palestinian family in Jericho, sleeping on the floors of mosques and traveling all throughout the desert with a group of brothers. Inspired by my experiences tending the garden of a stranger’s home in Jericho, or even on the kibbutz and my time in the Peace Corps, I realized how much joy working with my hands in the soil brings me.
When I was a little boy, I loved to explore the Wissahickon forest on my own in solitude. I would build teepees with sticks, sharpen spears, attempt to hunt deer, climb trees, swing from vines, and build bridges with stones—exploring the unknown, blazing my own trails and paths in my backyard. And now, as a 29-year-old adult, I placed a stone in a creek that I cross every day when I walk to work.
By remembering and following the thread of my inner child, in solitude, I found my path. I now work in horticulture—tending gardens, spending my time in the park, doing a lot of hard labor to be honest—chopping down trees, lugging thousands of pounds of wood to the recycling center, watering plants, digging holes, getting dirty, and working hard throughout the day. But here’s the thing—everything feels like play to me.
Everything Should Feel Like Voluntary Play
I think the tragedy of the modern world and society in general is that we get our inner child sucked out of us. We start to involuntarily play the game when we’re supposed to voluntarily play.
Think of a child. A child doesn’t need to be forced to go to the playground. A child simply wakes up, eager for the sunrise, ready for the day, ready to hit that playground.
And so that’s how I look at the world these days—in the street as my ultimate playground—and I’m just a big kid running around with my camera in my pocket. This is also how I feel in my work life, where I go to the garden to play during the day. Despite how hard it may be, it’s genuinely something that’s calling me and bringing me that sense of childlike joy in my life.
Think about play more, and how you can create a life of play—or what I like to call leisure—rather than involuntarily forcing yourself to do something because you feel like you should or have to. You should only do things because you want to.
A Life of Perpetual Otium Is My Goal
If you think about ancient Athens or Greece or Rome and all these beautiful city-states where philosophers would gather in the Agora or spend time under the Plato tree to just discuss philosophy and life and things—they actually had the leisure and free time to think, read, write, and discuss amongst each other.
Now, time is the ultimate currency. How you spend your time, and what you’re paying attention to, is what truly matters the most in life.
We basically spend 99% of our time doing things because we think we should or we have to, and this leads to a lack of leisure, a lack of freedom of the mind.
I ultimately find that by prioritizing the freedom of my mind, I’m able to evolve at a much more rapid rate than I otherwise would if I was attending to business affairs. I designed a lifestyle where I have the freedom to think throughout the entirety of my day—to attend lectures online, read ancient philosophy, or even read the Gospels and contemplate theology, make art, write poems, and go for walks in the woods.
It’s a tragedy that we no longer have free time. But more specifically, the lack of freedom of mind is the ultimate tragedy.
Because what I realize—even if I’m working hard labor, which I absolutely enjoy and find so much meaning in, and feel aligns with everything I could dream of in a lifestyle—even if we consider myself as an ancient Roman slave, toiling in the soil with knees on the ground and back bending: a life of physical slavery is at least much more interesting than this modern world of sedation.
I’d rather be enslaved in my body and have freedom of the mind than be enslaved of the mind and what I’m paying attention to.
I’d rather be an ancient Roman slave than a modern-day slave.
Think Like an Ancient, Live Like You’re Amish, But You’re Already in 2045
Cattle was one of the earliest forms of wealth. The word capital derives from cattle. When you think ancient, you unlock a new perception of reality.
Simply by studying the etymological root of the words you use daily, you can discover the truth. You don’t even need ancient books—just type the word into ChatGPT.
My philosophy: think like I’m an ancient, live like I’m Amish, but operate like I’m already in 2045. A simple life—spending time outside in the sun, upright, working with my hands in the soil, going to bed early, waking up early around 4:30. I keep a natural circadian rhythm all year round.
I like waking up and praying, ending the day with gratitude, and living that simple Amish life. Honestly, I just returned from Amish country in Lancaster, PA, where I purchased hundreds of pounds of beef. I bought a half cow, stored it in a deep freezer, and now have a decentralized food supply in my home—no longer dependent on corporations and grocery stores to feed me. I literally handshake a farmer and they provide me with the highest quality meat in the country.
Now that I’ve thought about the world ancient, and recognize the power of cattle, I take it seriously.
While I live like an Amish boy in the city, I’m also stacking sats in cyberspace, buying Bitcoin while the entire world is asleep to the future of money. I’m using AI daily while innovating in photography.
This is my approach to the video game—voluntary play, childlike joy, the life of an ancient philosopher amongst the ruins of an urban jungle, frolicking around with my meat and Bitcoin. Maybe I should just get a bowl cut next.
Walk Barefoot Like Socrates in the Symposium
I’ve been walking barefoot for over two and a half years now, and I find it interesting how many people comment on it. Even my godmother showed me an ad saying barefoot shoes are better for the elderly. People are starting to wake up.
But for me, it’s gone beyond physical reasons. It’s become philosophical, even spiritual. I used to work for a union, wearing steel toe boots on hard floors. I developed plantar fasciitis. But now, my posture is stronger, my back is better, and I feel adapted.
There’s also a mental component to this. It’s radical. It’s different. Walking with your toes out in these weird little finger shoes—it’s like rebuilding a video game character from the ground up.
When you start a game and you design your character, you pick shoes, hairstyle, outfit—but walking barefoot is stripping to the default character on the loading screen.
That’s why I wear all black, black barefoot shoes, tape over logos, no visible brands. It’s a rejection of identity through consumption. I don’t identify with the things I buy.
Instead of owning a car, I walk barefoot and take the bus. It’s like playing the video game on hardcore mode—but little does everyone know, I’ve got the cheat code. Because I’m becoming stronger, wiser, and freer—not owned by the things that people think they own.
How the Village Transformed My Life
When I lived in the village in Zambia, the first thing my host family presented me was a goat hanging from a tree to slaughter. After I slaughtered it, we feasted on the meat all week.
I fetched water from a well, lived under a thatched roof, worked a farm, learned a new language—and realized something profound.
Despite all the modern amenities, technology, and material things we have in cities, they don’t bring happiness.
People say wealth brings joy. But I beg to differ.
I’m not romanticizing the hardship. They deserve better—running water, proper plumbing, and waste disposal. But they have spiritual nourishment, unlike anything I’ve ever witnessed. They orient themselves upwards, not horizontally, where everyone is just grabbing for more.
Everyone lives selflessly, for the tribe or community.
And through that selfless way of life, they find joy. Maybe that’s why we’re so depressed here. Because we’re so selfish.
The word leisure has its origins in Old French and Latin. It comes from the Old French word leisir, meaning “capacity, freedom, or opportunity to do something,” which in turn derives from the Latin licēre, meaning “to be permitted” or “to be allowed.”
Licēre in Latin is related to the concept of freedom or permission, suggesting that leisure historically meant the freedom or opportunity to engage in activities of one’s choice without obligation. Over time, leisure evolved to its current meaning of free time spent away from duties, work, or obligations, often associated with relaxation and enjoyment.
Otium is a Latin term that refers to a state of leisure, peace, or freedom from duties, often used to describe a condition of productive rest or intellectual contemplation. In ancient Roman culture, otium was considered the opposite of negotium(business or work). It was not merely idleness but a time dedicated to enriching pursuits such as philosophy, literature, art, and personal development.
The concept held a significant place in the writings of Roman philosophers and poets like Cicero, Seneca, and Horace. For example:
Cicero saw otium as an ideal state that allowed for intellectual and philosophical growth.
Seneca linked otium to the practice of Stoicism, urging individuals to use their leisure time wisely for self-improvement and reflection.
Horace celebrated otium in his poetry as a space for appreciating beauty, nature, and the pleasures of life.
In a modern context, otium might inspire a reconsideration of how we approach leisure—not as mere escapism but as a vital component of a fulfilling and balanced life. It suggests the possibility of integrating rest with purposeful activities that nourish the mind and soul.
Etymology
The word otium comes from the Latin root oti-, which signifies “leisure” or “ease,” and its earliest usages date back to Ancient Rome. It primarily referred to a state of being free from work or business obligations (negotium, meaning “not leisure,” was its opposite).
The etymology of otium is thought to be connected to the Proto-Indo-European root ēi- or ei- (“to go”), which evolved into concepts of “rest” or “remaining” in later Latin. This suggests a transition from movement or labor to a state of tranquility or withdrawal.
Semantic Evolution:
In Classical Rome: Otium had positive connotations of restfulness and freedom, often associated with intellectual or creative pursuits, such as philosophical study, writing, or artistic work.
Medieval and Renaissance Latin: The word became linked more closely to scholarly or monastic practices, reflecting a contemplative withdrawal from the busy world.
Modern Influences: While otium is less commonly used today, its derivatives and conceptual echoes remain in words like “otiose” (meaning idle or futile in English) and the broader idea of leisure as a productive or reflective space.
The term captures a duality: leisure as both a withdrawal from the busyness of life and a platform for engaging in life’s higher purposes.
What does it mean to be at leisure and why does this matter?
For myself, leisure is something mental and physical. Leisure is not necessarily just chilling out at the beach, laying under the sun, and being passive. Leisure means more to me than the traditional idea of “vacation.”
The word vacation, deriving from the Latin verb, vacare , means “to be empty, free, or at leisure.”
Leisure is a mindset
Leisure is freedom. In a modern sense, to be free of your mind, is to have nothing on the schedule, nobody texting, calling, or emailing you. Leisure is simply spending the time that you have during the day how you want to without external influence. This mental freedom is something I value most in life.
Physical Leisure
Leisure is spending the maximum amount of time outside, walking, under the sun, making photos, videos, and exploring the world. It’s deciding on your own terms when you want to lift weights, exercise, and go for walks. Leisure isn’t just a time for rest, but it’s a time to be physical, through yoga, lifting, walking, nature, hikes, and things that typically seem “a waste of time“ in a modern sense.
To be at leisure is to be free.
I believe that work can be leisure, depending on how you look at it. For instance, my work in Horticulture, gardening, is something I treat completely as physical leisure. It’s a way for me to meditate, be present, and spend time in nature. I suggest we all think more critically about what leisure means to us, and pursue that as much as possible. This modern world prioritizes the idea of productivity way too much, and I think it’s best for all of us to take a step back, and live our everyday life on our own terms.
📚 The Ultimate Guide: Immutable, Open-Source Photo Archive
Create a permanent, verifiable, open-source archive of your photography using the best tools available today. This guide walks you through every step — from organizing your files to timestamping them on the Bitcoin blockchain and building a public-facing website to display your work.
🧱 Overview of Your Setup
Component
Tool/Platform
Purpose
File Format
High-res JPEGs + Small JPEGs
Full-quality preservation + web display
Hashing Algorithm
SHA-256
Best cryptographic fingerprinting
Timestamping Blockchain
Bitcoin via OpenTimestamps
Decentralized, immutable time proof
Permanent Storage
IPFS (free) + optional Arweave (paid)
Decentralized, tamper-proof hosting
Static Site Generator
Hugo (fastest, most popular)
Build a simple, fast archive site
Hash Verifier Tool
shasum -a 256 (Mac/Linux) or HashMyFiles (Windows)
Create hashes locally
Web Gateway
ipfs.io, cloudflare-ipfs.com, or your own IPFS node
Serve files from IPFS reliably
Optional Front-End Hosting
GitHub Pages, Vercel, or Netlify
Free static site deployment
✅ Step-by-Step Process
🔹 1. Organize Your Photo Archive
Create a folder structure like this:
/photo-archive/
├── 2025/
│ ├── 2025-07-02-boy-on-bike.jpg ← High-res
│ ├── 2025-07-02-boy-on-bike-small.jpg ← Small JPEG for web
Tip: Keep filenames clean using the format: YYYY-MM-DD-title.jpg.
🔹 2. Generate SHA-256 Hashes (Local Verification)
Mac/Linux Terminal:
shasum -a 256 2025-07-02-boy-on-bike.jpg >> hashes.txt
Windows: Use HashMyFiles and export hashes to hashes.txt.
This hashes.txt becomes your public integrity manifest.
🔹 3. Timestamp Hashes on the Bitcoin Blockchain (Proof of Existence)
Once deployed, your archive is now public, open-source, and verifiable.
🔹 8. (Optional) Upload Hashes and Timestamp Proof to GitHub
To ensure transparency:
Create a public GitHub repo.
Include hashes.txt and hashes.ots.
Anyone can now verify the timestamp and authenticity of your photo archive independently.
🎨 Front-End Layout Recommendation
For each photo page:
-----------------------------------------
📸 [Small JPEG Displayed Here]
🖼️ Title: Boy on Bike
📅 Date Taken: July 2, 2025
🔗 Download: [Download High-Res JPEG via IPFS]
🧬 SHA-256 Hash: 3f7857c0a4e6b74a9f2e1d2d0b58fdbdd3293c7f5d373b11e0f36b4a132f8ea1
-----------------------------------------
You can also include:
Camera info
Tags
Notes or story
🧠 Final Thoughts
You now have:
High-res JPEGs stored on IPFS
Cryptographic hashes proving image integrity
Timestamps on Bitcoin verifying when they existed
A clean, fast, static website for public access
A transparent GitHub repo for verification
This is an open-source, decentralized, censorship-resistant archive that can last forever.
I feel like I can see beyond the veil when I hold up my LCD screen to life, viewing the world in high contrast black-and-white-
The Platonic Aesthetic
The Platonic aesthetic is rooted in Plato’s philosophy of beauty, art, and form. It emerges from his metaphysical worldview, where what is truly beautiful exists not in the physical world, but in a realm of perfect, eternal, and unchanging Forms (or Ideas).
1. Beauty as an Eternal Form
Plato believed that everything in the physical world is an imperfect reflection of a more perfect, abstract reality—the World of Forms. Among these Forms is Beauty itself—not any particular beautiful object or face, but the pure essence of Beauty.
“Beauty is not in the object. It is in the Idea of the object.”
When we see something beautiful (a sunset, a sculpture, a face), we’re catching a glimpse of the eternal Form of Beauty, filtered through the material world.
2. The Ascent to Beauty (Symposium)
In Plato’s dialogue Symposium, he outlines a mystical, philosophical ladder called the “Ladder of Love”, described by Diotima. It goes like this:
Attraction to a beautiful body
Admiration of all beautiful bodies
Appreciation of the beauty of the soul
Love of beautiful laws and institutions
Love of knowledge and philosophy
Contemplation of Beauty itself—pure, eternal, and divine
This is a spiritual and intellectual progression—a move from the sensory to the transcendent.
“He who has been instructed thus far in the things of love… is approaching the final revelation: the Form of Beauty itself.” – Symposium
3. Art as Imitation (Republic)
Plato was skeptical of artists. In The Republic, he argued that:
Artists merely imitate the world around them (which is already an imitation of the Forms).
So art is twice removed from the truth.
It can mislead or stir emotions irrationally, pulling us further from philosophical truth.
“Poets and painters do not produce truth, but shadows of shadows.”
He wanted art to be morally and intellectually uplifting, not merely entertaining or emotional.
4. Harmony and Proportion
Plato admired mathematical harmony, symmetry, and proportion—especially in art and architecture (think of the golden ratio). These qualities mirrored the rational order of the cosmos and the Forms.
In this way, true beauty is linked with order, unity, and balance.
Summary of the Platonic Aesthetic
Beauty is objective and exists in an immaterial, eternal realm.
Sensory beauty is a gateway to philosophical truth.
The ultimate goal is to contemplate the Form of Beauty, not just physical appearances.
Art must aim to elevate the soul, not distract it with illusions.
True beauty is tied to truth, goodness, and harmony.
So what would Plato think about my idea of shooting high contrast, black and white as a way to return to the essence of the medium of photography, drawing with light
What Would Plato Think of High-Contrast Black-and-White Photography?
Plato would likely admire the intention behind the idea of shooting high-contrast, black-and-white photography—especially if it’s a method to cut through illusion, strip away distraction, and pursue the essence of the medium: drawing with light.
In The Republic, Plato criticizes art for being too focused on the superficial, the sensual, the copy of a copy. But if black-and-white photography deliberately removes color, abstraction, and noise to reveal underlying form, light, shadow, and structure, he might see it as an act of purification.
You’re moving away from the material world’s seductive appearances and toward something closer to the Form of Light—using the medium to ascend toward clarity, order, and truth.
Plato might say: “This photographer is not chasing appearances. He is seeking the invisible behind the visible.”
2. Drawing with Light = Returning to the Form
Photography literally means drawing with light. And Plato believed true beauty and truth reside in form and essence, not the fleeting material surface.
By emphasizing light and shadow, and removing the “noise” of color or over-complexity, you’re pointing toward eternal structures—geometry, rhythm, proportion. That aligns with Plato’s belief in mathematical harmony and essential forms as the root of beauty.
Your method could be seen as an attempt to bypass illusion and imitate not the things of this world, but the timeless logic behind them.
3. A Modern Allegory of the Cave
In some ways, your photography could function as a modern allegory of the cave:
Most people see the world as it is—chaotic, cluttered, full of color and stimulation (shadows on the cave wall).
Your camera becomes the instrument that turns the soul around (like the philosopher’s ascent out of the cave).
High contrast black and white becomes a method to reveal what’s essential—the light itself, rather than the forms it bounces off.
You’re not just capturing light—you’re teaching people to see it.
4. Would Plato Approve?
Yes—if your work is aimed at elevating perception, leading viewers away from mere appearance and toward truth, form, and light itself, Plato would likely see you as a rare artist who uses the medium properly.
He might still be skeptical of photography as a “copy of a copy,” but he’d respect the philosophical discipline behind your approach.
Your photography, in Platonic terms, isn’t mimesis (mere imitation)—it’s anamnesis: a remembering of the light.
Archangel Uriel is often known as the Archangel of Wisdom, Light, and Truth. His name means “God is my Light” or “Fire of God” in Hebrew. Though not as commonly mentioned in the canonical texts of the Bible as Michael, Gabriel, or Raphael, Uriel plays a significant role in various apocryphal, mystical, and esoteric traditions.
🔥 Who is Uriel?
Name Meaning: Uriel = אוּרִיאֵל (ʾŪrīʾēl) = “God is my light” or “Flame of God”
Role: Bringer of divine wisdom, interpreter of prophecy, angel of repentance and transformation
Element: Often associated with fire or earth, depending on the tradition
Color: Red, gold, or amber
Direction: North (in many angelic systems, especially in Hermetic Qabalah)
📖 Biblical and Apocryphal Sources
Uriel does not appear by name in the Protestant or Catholic Bible, but is prominent in:
2 Esdras / 4 Ezra (Apocrypha): Uriel is sent by God to answer the prophet Ezra’s deep questions about the fate of mankind and divine justice.
Book of Enoch: Uriel is one of the seven archangels. He warns Noah about the coming flood.
Christian Mysticism (especially Eastern Orthodox and Anglican traditions): Revered as an angel of repentance and enlightenment.
Occult and Kabbalistic Texts: Linked to Hod, the sphere of intellect and communication on the Tree of Life.
✨ Symbolism
Fire: Purification, truth, passion, illumination
Scroll or Book: Represents divine wisdom and understanding
Flame or Lantern: Guidance through darkness, inner transformation
Sword or Staff: Justice and the cutting away of ignorance
🙏 Praying to Uriel
People often call on Uriel when seeking:
Insight in decision-making
Divine truth and understanding
Help in solving problems or unlocking spiritual mysteries
Emotional healing and release of anger
Simple Invocation:
“Archangel Uriel, bring your light into my mind and heart. Illuminate my path with wisdom and help me see truth clearly.”
🧠 Uriel & Philosophy
Uriel can be seen as the archetype of the philosopher-angel—a divine mind that guides seekers toward clarity and revelation. He’s the spark of Logos, the inner fire that calls one to rise above ignorance and align with divine will.
In that sense, Uriel reflects both the Socratic spirit of inquiry and the Heraclitean flame of inner transformation.
What’s popping, people? It’s Dante, getting my morning started here in Center City, Philadelphia. Headed to the Schuylkill River Trail, starting the day with a nice walk by the river. This is my perfect start — just go straight to the water, take a long walk, and make some photographs.
You know, walking is kinda boring when you think about it. You’re just walking. Like, who wants to just walk around all day? But when you pair it with photography and you’ve got a camera in your hand, it’s like — wow. Thank God for photography. Like, genuinely. With photography, I feel unstoppable. I feel like I’ve got a sword that I wield, cutting through all the noise, all the chaos on the streets.
I actually feel the most alive when I’m surrounded by chaos. It takes me back to when I was on the front lines in Jericho, photographing Palestinians getting shot at with live ammo at the border. Israelis shooting at me. It’s kinda crazy thinking about it — did I really do that? How did I do that?
I’m 29 now. I was 20 then. I think as you get older, your brain develops or something. You start making more decisions, thinking too much. You get in your head. But back then? Man, I was just like — fuck it. Full force. I ran through that desert.
Was I scared? Of course. But you can be scared and still push through it. You overcome cowardice with courage. With spiritedness. With thumos.
The Lion Within
When I think of thumos, I think of the lion inside you that wants to roar. That’s what we should be channeling as photographers. Because how you engage with the world is what gets reflected in your photos. That energy, that vitality — that’s everything. Without power, how are you ever going to cultivate curiosity?
Photography takes vitality. When I have vitality, I have clarity. So let me break this down practically — how to increase your vitality.
Barefoot Shoes
First off, barefoot shoes. Game changer. Been wearing them for over two years now. I feel so much more connected to the ground, to the earth. I feel the sidewalk under me right now. It’s like saying fuck you to the system that wants you domesticated. The zoo-animal lifestyle. But barefoot, I feel wild again.
And on a physical level, they’re fixing my posture, strengthening my feet, calves, back, spine. My gait is stronger. I feel more in tune with my body.
Fasting
And I fast. Not even for health reasons anymore. I fast because I feel more spiritually connected when I’m fasted. I do one meal a day. When I’m fasted and walking the streets, I feel this connection between my gut, my heart, and my mind — that’s the trinity for me.
Since I started fasting, I have zero decision fatigue. I’m just locked in. Laser focused. I notice patterns in nature, in people. I see the light, and the moments just come to me. I respond fast. Intuitively.
Street photography is spontaneous. You want your intuition to be sharp. That vagus nerve runs from your gut to your heart to your brain — 80% of the signals come from the gut up. You’re not living in your fucking head. You’re a biped. You stand upright. You walk. Your head is on a swivel. But everything begins in the body.
Delete Instagram
If you’re waking up in bed and checking Instagram first thing, posting for likes, scrolling — that’s like waking up, taking a shit in your hands, and smearing it on your face. In your eyes. In your mouth.
Why would you wanna start your day like that?
Delete your Instagram. For real. What are you even using it for? It’s cancer for a photographer. When you photograph for yourself, purely for yourself, without an audience, that’s when you find your real voice.
Even the praise, the followers, the likes — it’s all just noise. I removed comments. I removed likes. I don’t care what anyone thinks. And that’s exactly why I can photograph with clarity now. I only focus on what matters to me.
Publish Independently
If you want to publish your work, good. I think you should. But do it for yourself.
I use WordPress.org and Bluehost to host my own site — my name dot com — and I use the Astra theme. It’s minimal. Like Tumblr in 2012. I post my photos, write my thoughts, and move on. It’s part of the discipline.
Wake up. Walk. Make pictures. Cull. Post. Repeat. That’s my practice. That’s how I stay clear.
Courage Is Everything
Courage — it comes from cor, meaning heart. With courage, you go into the unknown, into danger, into chaos, and come out unscathed. Like David walking up to Goliath with a slingshot, armored with God.
When you’re out in the world with your camera, that spiritedness matters. Tap into something bigger than yourself. For me, I’m a disciple of Christ. Not even “Christian” — I don’t like that term. I just follow Christ. That’s it.
It means I’m connected to the source. There’s a light in all of us. If you believe in Providence — not just believe, but know — then you move with courage. You don’t fear death.
Saint Michael the Archangel is on my shoulder. If God wills it, I’ll fall into the water right now. I’m gonna walk on the edge of danger. Because that’s the only life worth living. A life of vitality, danger, exploration. Through photography, I conquer the day. I give my life meaning and zest.
The Next Photo Is the Best Photo
I don’t dwell on yesterday’s shots. I’m not thinking about tomorrow’s. I’m right here. Right now. Observing the light bounce off the water. Just making pictures. Snapshotting my way through life.
If you haven’t been getting the results you want in photography, I’ve got the answer: add some limits. Give yourself structure. Challenges. Make things uncomfortable again.
I used to shoot comfortably for years. But the past three? I made it harder. I changed everything. Destroyed my old habits. Rebuilt new ones. And that’s where the growth happened.
The Ricoh GR Method
Go to dantesisofo.com, hit the Start Here page. You’ll find my guide to the Ricoh GR.
Use:
Small JPEG
High contrast black and white
No editing
No excuses
Follow my autistic step-by-step breakdown. Do it for a month. Hell, even a week. You’ll start seeing photos that actually resonate with you. All through constraint.
Photography is light and shadow. Strip everything else away. Return to play. Return to joy.
Play and Joy
Adults stop playing. But play is the superpower.
When you’re in the street and you treat the world like a playground — when you’re tinkering, exploring, snapshotting — that’s where your voice shows up.
Each day, I go back to the drawing board. I reset to Day One. I don’t let the complexity overwhelm me. I find infinite beauty in the mundane.
Can you walk the same block every day and still find something beautiful?
That’s the real challenge. That’s the name of the game.
Vitality Through Simplicity
I joined a boxing gym. Not to become a pro. Just to play. Just to move.
No more counting macros. No more split routines. Just:
Barefoot walking
Pull-ups
Push-ups
Dips
Squats
Shadowboxing
My recovery drink? Raw honey, raw milk, and salt. Shake it up. Drink after class. Deep sleep. Instant recovery. Wake up and repeat.
My morning? Espresso and a spoon of raw honey with salt. Hydrate. Simple protocols. Huge results.
Fasting isn’t even about health anymore. It’s about photographic clarity. I just feel better fasted. Gut over mind. Body over mind.
Shoot From the Gut
You ever have gut issues? Feel like shit? That’s real. Gut health drives everything. Emotions, anxiety, clarity.
Photography? It’s gut work. Not brain work. People think it’s visual, cerebral, technical. Nah. Shoot from the gut. Shoot from the heart. That’s how your soul shows up.
Use the LCD screen. It’s 2025. Who’s still using a viewfinder?
Repetition Is Key
Treat photography like reps at the gym. The more you shoot, the more you grow. Simple.
More walking = more seeing
More seeing = more photographs
More photographs = more improvement
More improvement = more curiosity
That curiosity becomes courage. That courage becomes confidence. That confidence becomes joy.
Let Go of the Seriousness
Stop trying to be some visual storyteller with a vest and a “youth in the city” thesis. That shit is boring. Same photos. Same art. Same dead-eyed gallery nonsense.
Let go. Have fun. This is for joy. For you.
Photography has given me an insatiable love for life. I haven’t missed a sunrise in three years. I haven’t sat down in three years. I just keep moving. I’m working on something bigger than me.
My project? Archive Philadelphia.
That’s it. No subheading. No artist statement. Just the truth.
Sketchbooks and Simplicity
You don’t need a publisher. Get a Canon Selphy CP1500. Print 4x6s. Tape them into a sketchbook. That’s your book. Done.
That’s enough for me.
Philly Is Paradise
Fairmount Waterworks — this is paradise. Peace and clarity in nature. I can walk the forest trails, be deep in the woods, then snap into the chaos of 15th and Chestnut. Gritty. Raw. Real.
Philadelphia is just small enough to walk every day and still find newness. My new philosophy? I have zero desire to travel. There’s so much here.
When you find peace in where you are, that’s power. That’s freedom.