It’s not what you think! That kid is not Jesus, and he cannot walk on water. It’s just another one of those perfectly timed photos that are going around the internet; only this one could be the mother of all perfectly timed photos. Can you see how everything about him is relaxed, making it seem like he’s just casually doing something that he does daily?
The kid even looks like he’s tipping his toes on the water to check the temperature. To whoever took this photo, call me because I need pictures like that also! Jesus was not the only one to wall the water!
We Hope This Isn't Real, But it is!
The thought of walking above a gigantic sinkhole isn't something that you'd want to think about as you go through your daily hustle, but unfortunately, these things exist. The one shown in the photo above happened in Guatemala City, brought by the torrential of Agatha. It was the first tropical storm brought by 2010's hurricane season. It blew over Southern Mexico and Central America and triggered fatal floods and landslides.
A sinkhole, sometimes called by people as a swallow hole, happens when the surface layer collapses due to outside interferences. These interferences mostly occur through chemical dissolutions or suffosion processes of carbonate rocks.
Question: Why?!
The world has so many different people with different beliefs and personalities that one would never have an identical way of living because in some ways. There is no right or wrong and if you feel comfortable doing something, who are we to judge? Being different is not a bad thing; it's what makes the world such an interesting place.
We must learn to admit that we vary when it comes to interests, but my question right now is, why would someone put watermelons on their heads while watching a baseball game? Can someone please tell me!? What's wrong with good old fashion hats?
The Mother of All Perfectly Timed Photos
Everyone knows and loves seemingly infinite amounts of perfectly timed photos scattered across the internet, but this might just arguably be number one on that list. Here's a genuine and unedited picture of a Yosemite waterfall taken at the perfect and precise moment when the sun reflected from the splashing waters.
They call it the waterfall rainbow, and it isn't the only photo of its kind that's going across the internet. It's a photography discovery commonly seen among the waterfalls of Yosemite. This is, without a doubt, nature at its prime and another proof that you don't need much, and these are the true gifts of life.
Believe It or Not, That’s Paint
They took the photo shown above at "Sergels Torg" or "Sergel's Square," the most central public square of Stockholm, Sweden. They named it after the 18th-century sculptor named Johan Tobias Sergel. The sculptor had built a workshop located in the northern part of the square. As you can see, this is much more than just a square.
Somewhere in the square is an artwork that bends reality by combining all the elements of a grand optical illusion. If you notice in the photograph, there's a big, almost triangular hole on the floor; they used paint and a few shading techniques, so you don't need to worry about that.