id: 12410158
I captured this image on 24th July 2025 at Patenga Sea Beach in Chittagong, Bangladesh. It symbolizes the human eye (our natural camera); that is why I captured this picture to present the connection between eyes and our facing previous and current situations. I took this photo using my mobile phone while standing at the seashore, contemplating how vision is influenced by our thoughts, memories, and experiences. This image was not just a visual capture; it was a bridge between perception and realization. I took this image to describe my understanding based on my previous experience, which I had during 2023 at Cox’s Bazar sea beach.
The image depicts that every person sees the world through their own lens, shaped by their upbringing and life experiences. In 2023, I visited the Cox’s Bazar sea beach with my classmates, hoping to escape the stress of everyday life. There, I saw a little girl who had gotten wet and undressed to dry off. It seemed an innocent moment to me. But one of my friends reacted differently. He believed the girl’s parents should have been more careful, worried that people might look at her with bad intentions. His concern puzzled me at first, but then I understood. I was raised in a relatively safe environment, where girls move freely without fear. But he came from a place where harassment and judgment were common; his perspective was shaped by a harsher reality.
People have five senses, such as sight (vision), hearing, touch, taste, and smell, which means five sense organs, such as eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and skin. Five senses help us to understand the world, stay safe from harm, communicate with others, feel emotions, and enjoy. We are human; every person has a different point of view about a single situation, but it is not different all the time. In some cases, people have the same understanding and observation, and one thing is that we can have the option with the eyes to observe the situation because eyes are sense organs.
This photo isn’t just a beach scene; it’s a metaphor for awareness. It brings forward my belief that what we see is never just about the image itself but about who we are, where we come from, and how we’ve learned to understand the world.
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