Friday, December 14, 2018

Clara

Vigorous contemplation astronomically acclimated objectively focused on enigmatic night skies.

The loss of a loved one, the end of a marriage, caught up in one's work, cold obsession wears thin.

Pedagogically anyway, those are the kinds of unimaginative questions purposeless fools think up in bland appeals to flippant provocation, having nothing that drives them themselves they seek recognition in blasé slander, as they rigidly capsize then flounder away.

No matter.

Perhaps Dr. Isaac Bruno (Patrick J. Adams) did need a break, but his uninterrupted logical obsession does lead to prosperous discoveries.

With Clara (Troian Bellisario), an independent spirit emboldening itinerant fascination, having travelled the globe she applies to work with Dr. Bruno, bringing passion and impulse and style to their studies, cooly adopting romantic methods, warmly embracing emotions age old.

Imaginary numbers.

Heart.

Spawn of the universe interdimensionally abstracting to practically envision passage, spiritual transference incorporeally transmitting commensurate extraterrestrial caches, juxtaposed entities interpreting as one coyly generating crinkly bifrost, the bond of the inexplicable reciting interplanetary sun drenched dawns.

Sci-fi love, intergalactically conceptualized, resoundingly researched, indiscriminately developed.

This Clara, Akash Sherman's Clara, true synthesis of art and science, like a seashell or desert haze.

Posing questions with no reasonable response, intercessions padded feasible parlance, cool realistic bonsai that values stoic discipline, charmed cogent romance which denotes with precision.

With academically inclined composed characters well suited to dreamy wild cards, Clara contrasts teaching with research, the lab with the world at large, objective analysis with inspired intuition, and dismal grief with resilient hope.

Dr. Durant (Ennis Esmer) and Dr. Bruno's approaches to higher education complement each other well, and even though misfortune has ended Dr. Jenkins (Kristen Hager) and Dr. Bruno's marriage, they still maintain a professional relationship as time slowly goes by.

Alternative thinking and experimental readings lead to rational conclusions which reclassify ontological taxonomies.

I have no idea how to find them, or contact them, but there must be other lifeforms out there.

I don't know how much should be spent trying to find them.

But hopefully some's spent on dolphins, improbability.

The sea.

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