Description
Yesterday, I went to bed much earlier, as I wished to be awake in time for the big moment of the solar eclipse without being disturbed by an alarm. Lo and behold, I woke up as the morning sun was young, but a gaze outside revealed the darkness I witnessed was in fact due to clouds. I had hoped they would clear in time for me to view the centennial occurrence, but they instead turned to light rainfall as the hours passed, which only cleared to show sunlight as the eclipse was at its end. Naturally, I'm rather disappointed that the weather stood in the way of this once-in-a-lifetime event (well, unless I live another hundred years), but going outside in the rain to look for even a little spot in the clouds, while not yielding my ideal results, filled me with an unusual positive energy. Surely I was drenched by the gentle precipitation, but I didn't mind; indeed, what were the chances of being alive and outside during an ecliptic spot of rain? Save for the occasional vehicle driving by, I was alone for the experience, as though it were myself and the sky sharing some time together. Also, I checked the mail and had to hide a couple letters under my shirt, so there's that.
This photo was taken with my dad's phone. Only minor edits were performed; I cropped the top of the image, as my hand was slightly blocking the camera to avoid getting the phone wet, and the license plates were smudged for privacy, just in case. I may not have been through the eclipse the way I wanted, but the way I got was a gift in its own right, I believe.
Comments: 19
Laboreet [2023-03-22 20:39:13 +0000 UTC]
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Tuishimi [2022-12-22 14:53:29 +0000 UTC]
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ChalkArtist1216 [2019-09-18 13:56:57 +0000 UTC]
Fear not, there will be another eclipse in the USA in 2024!
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Sinperium [2018-03-07 16:41:12 +0000 UTC]
I was in Atlanta at "ground zero" for an eclipse in the 80's and it was spectacular.
I was at work near Roswell, Georgia (home scene for indie bands, not aliens) and it is on a hill overlooking the city of Atlanta, Georgia. Because of the elevation, we could see the shadow of the moon rushing towards us at 1600 mph.
Seconds before it hit a blast of cold air blew over us (this was summer)--it was the cooling air around the shadow pushing the warm air away. Then the shadow came over us and the entire city of Atlanta turned pitch black for a second before all of the city lights were turned on. It was incredible!
Hope you catch the next one.
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TheRejectPhoenix In reply to Sinperium [2018-03-07 17:02:32 +0000 UTC]
That sure sounds incredible! Glad you could experience that.
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OmnipotentCarrot [2017-10-26 00:18:53 +0000 UTC]
Wow. I didn't have eclipse glasses, but my stepdad and I had pinhole projectors, and I observed the shadow through the light dappled through my catalpa tree. Once in a lifetime, but I felt honored to live when it occurred. Not in the path of full totality, but it was still amazing.
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TheRejectPhoenix In reply to OmnipotentCarrot [2017-10-26 00:46:12 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, I can imagine that'd be really awesome. Glad you guys could at least catch it partially!
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OmnipotentCarrot In reply to TheRejectPhoenix [2017-10-26 00:49:06 +0000 UTC]
Yeah. I actually should post my accumulated photos I've taken on my phone, since I love taking photos of natural stuff I encounter.
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TheoneColdSpark [2017-10-16 19:10:22 +0000 UTC]
Reminds me of Colorado Springs.
Thanks for the llama badge, by the way.
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