Travel: Self-centered trip by Terence McKenna. Terence ยท McKenna has become one of the most famous people to explore the effects of hallucinations and it on society and technology. McKenna supports his theory here including psychedelic mushrooms, virtual reality, shamanism, evolution. This is definitely one of the most strange and most interesting articles I have ever read. At first it seemed almost incomprehensible and incredible, but after reading a few times it began to make sense with a good dictionary and a thesaurus.
The inside trip is about my inner journey. These images appear in my dreams, appear again and again, bring them out and bring them into "reality". In this way I will automatically analyze and share my world with others. There is nothing special, but it represents a special power to make dreams a reality. My technique for lenses, Light Painting is a long exposure shot (1 minute) and a small LED light, the scene is drawn with light. With the scale model, creative flexibility is very high. Build and customize models as you like, bring them to the studio, combine camera effects, build small stereo models and digital art, and realize ideas and dreams. You do not need much equipment to tell a powerful story. In this case, I need a camera, tripod, small LED flashlight, yes, some imagination
The most important thing in the inner trip is the self-reflection challenge. Do you agree? Inner journey involves individuals reviewing their growth and development based on their tasks and exploring themselves to stimulate their experiences. Most importantly, the inner journey is a self-reflection challenge. Robert Cormier writes the following words: "All of us collapse", Hassan Abdulrazzak's "Baghdad Wedding" and Bob Dylan (Bob Dylan) "How things changed"
Beyond the era, people understand this inner existence that intuitively leads a journey of life. The Greeks call this center "inner magic" (meaning "moved by mental power"). In ancient Egypt, this inner power was expressed as a concept of "Ba" (soul). The Roman regarded this as a "genius" of each person. Jung asked himself once, "Why did you walk on your own path and led to creating an unconscious identity from the public?" "This commonality is called occupation, which means that people have been released from the herd and its old path.