There are moments where what you’re seeing doesn’t match what you feel you should be able to see. The sky, the moon, distant objects—they appear different through a screen than they do in person. It raises a simple but important question: is it a limitation of the device, or a reflection of how perception itself works?
Every tool operates within a specific range. Cameras, like human vision, capture only certain wavelengths and filter out the rest. This means what’s recorded isn’t the full picture, but a translated version of it. Over time, as technology improves, that range expands—but it never fully represents everything that exists beyond its current capacity.
As awareness grows, so does curiosity about what lies outside of those visible limits. Not necessarily as something to immediately define, but as something to recognize—that perception is always partial. And from that understanding, the focus shifts from trying to capture everything… to becoming more aware of what’s being experienced in the first place.
