Moments


YouTube Link with HD

William Hoffman is a New York filmmaker who put this video together and uploaded it last August.  It's finally getting some viral activity, and rightfully so.  It's "a celebration of life that was inspired by David Eagleman's book, Sum."

I do enjoy a perfectly realized edit, and this one's full of them.  William's website.


I lasted 32 seconds. Then I just shook my head.
Art through symbolism is a waste of time for me. I see these things every day. It's called society. Wow, it doesn't take a film to live in it.
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I looked at the scene with the trees, grass, sidewalk, curb and bus and immediately thought, "New Jersey!" Scrolling the video back to read the license plate on the bus, it was indeed, New Jersey.
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19 seconds Ted? Is this a boast about how quickly you think you can distinguish good from bad? About how very busy you are with more important stuff? Or is this a demonstration of an inability to take the time to look and to see? An example of the fact that although beauty is all around us most people, Ted included, do not take even a moment to notice it and appreciate it. I hope that whatever you had to rush to do in that second half of one minute was more substantial and more meaningful but I doubt it was. But it does not matter and you don't care because you will not have perceived it anyway. Slow down Ted.
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This was brilliant. If you cannot appreciate these moments in time, then you are missing out on the major journey that is life. Life is not the end results, for if it was, it would simply be death. Life is all those little in betweens, which is what was captured here.

Imagine you had never experienced this world, that you were in some sort of experience-less purgatory, where you knew words and ideas, but you had no concept of what the world was really like, and for one instance in your existence, you were allowed one glimpse of what life was, but it would only last for 257 seconds. Your entire existence wondering, waiting, and now you have only 257 seconds to see it.

That is what I see in this video.
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Although it seems that the intention of the video is to make your heart go pitter-patter, I found more value in the discussion it opens up.

I seems as though a moment can be likened to a morpheme in language. Small units that we, in our unaided human perception of time and action, can assign some sense of meaning and intention to in relation to a whole event.

Made me think about how we think. What properties does a snippet of our lives have to possess in order to qualify as a graspable unit that our minds can label as a part going towards a whole or merely a part unto itself. I think that "moments" occur where language can contain an event that lays just within the perceptible boundary of our unaided senses.
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Rob:
No, I guess I just prefer to make my own moments, and don't rely on somebody else to tell me what generic moments I should appreciate.

I gave up after 19 seconds because this was just an apparently random scattering of images. If I want that, I'll do an image search on google.
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I liked the message.
Life is wonderful and tragic. Yet there is a certain beauty even in the sad moments of our lives. One day, like a balloon that escapes its owner grasp, its simply gone.
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Imagine you had never experienced this world, that you were in some sort of experience-less purgatory, where you knew words and ideas, but you had no concept of what the world was really like, and for one instance in your existence, you were allowed one glimpse of what life was, but it would only last for 257 seconds.
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