Photo Essay: COMET PURPLE MOUNTAIN

Comet C/2023 A3 Tsuchinshan ATLAS over the volcano Mount Teide, in Tenerife, Canary Islands. Tsuchinshan (紫金山 Zǐjīn Shān, in Mandarin ) means Purple Mountain, in Chinese. The shots were taken during the comet’s last few days visiting the Earth, when it was most visible right after the sunset, and before it left us for another 80.000 years.

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Photo Essay: Correfoc

Correfocs (literally meaning Fire Run) is a celebration typical of Catalan Culture and Folklore that involves running the streets of old Catalan villages surrounded by fire and monstrous/mythical figures. This practice dates back to the Middle Ages and it borrows from the tradition of the  'Devil Dances' (Balls del diable), symbolizing the fight between good and evil. However, Correfocs as we know them today are a relatively new practice that took shape in the late 1970s with the death of Dictator Franco and the birth of Democratic Spain. Then, Catalan people finally had the chance to openly embrace their traditions and culture without risking prosecution.

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Photo Essay: G A L L O P

G A L L O P is the result of Laia Palma’s inviting me to spend a couple of hours at her Equestrian Club, Equus Empordà (Spain). During this limited amount of time, I followed Laia around her club while she told me about the values behind the vision of the club she has been growing during the last few years. And how her unique relationship with the horses and other animals inhabiting the place make Equus Empordà a very unique Equestrian Club.

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Photo Essay: Ritan Moments

Ri Tan Gong Yuan 日坛公园, the park of the temple of the Sun, was one of my secret spots in Beijing. A place I used to go to for reflection. This balcony was one of the spots where I managed to make time to find stillness. It turned out, I wasn’t the only one relying on this sacred space to find solace and to understand the dynamics of an ever changing environment.

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A Note from Passing Guest: Main Language

This is an excerpt from my book Passing Guest, where I explain my personal relationship between storytelling and language. Beyond my writing, speaking several languages is a big part of my life. I grew up bilingual (Spanish and Catalan) and at different stages of my life I learnt French, English and Chinese, as well as some Korean and Bahasa Indonesia. My relationship with all these languages shaped my experiences and my life away from my home country. In my novel The Mansion South of Maple Street, I wanted to give languages an important value to the story and the are part of the main character’s relationship with the environment in different ways.

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Comics that Redefine Humankind

Since their foundation in 2013, in Nigeria, Comic Republic has been reminding the world that the heroes and villains of our comics should all have a single mission: to find unity within the diversity of our humanity. Comic Republic’s stories stay away from any of the stereotypes that define African villains in international comics. Instead, they bring a new and much needed approach to the conversation of what it means to be evil.

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How to find lost family members: Spanish Civil War and World War II

With this blog post, I want to contribute to the quest for social justice with sharing some of the main resources that I have been using to track my grand uncle down. With the hope that this will help more people like my family to increase their chances to find some degree of peace. And to keep alive the memory of their loved ones who fought for freedom during the Spanish Civil War and the WWII.

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Cómo encontrar familiares perdidos: La Guerra Civil Española y la Segunda Guerra Mundial

Con esta entrada en mi blog, quiero contribuir a la justicia social, compartiendo algunos de los principales recursos que he estado usando para rastrear a mi tío abuelo. Con la esperanza de que esto ayude a más personas a incrementar sus posibilidades de encontrar algún grado de paz por lo que sucedió a sus antepasados y para mantener vivo el recuerdo de sus seres queridos que lucharon por la libertad durante la Guerra Civil española y la Segunda Guerra Mundial.

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Why I Self Publish: My Journey And A Few Tips On Sharing Your Stories

I have been asked many times what led me to self-publishing in the first place.The truth is there is no specific answer. Multiple factors came into play, and I want to share them here because I think some of the reasons I did so are not often discussed when considering the benefits of self-publishing, and other independent writers might benefit from it.

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Prologue: Passing Guest, An Experiment in Love

Passing Guest takes the form of a set of fictional short stories led by an imaginary character, a woman, who embodies eight enigmas of love, kindness and hope. She sets herself on a quest that takes her to Hong Kong, South Korea, North Korea and neighbouring mainland China, The Democratic Republic of Congo, South Sudan, Uganda, Senegal, and the cities of London and Barcelona.

As she tries to find her answers, she transports herself to different universes, possibilities of being and seeing, and ultimately of finding love. Soon she discovers that who she is (and who we are) can only be answered by the magic of love, which is as beautifully unique as every single one of us who makes up our diverse humanity.

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PRESS RELEASE: Searching New Horizons of Meaning Through Love and our Environment

In this collection of fictional stories, Passing Guest, Iris Mir imagines what the futures of random bystanders on the streets would look like if they had the chance to experience love in a new way; one of compassion and kindness toward others.

With this in mind, Mir writes their dreamed stories honouring their lives, their voices and the reason their hypothetical love-experience would matter to our social fabric. Their imaginary stories become a reminder of the importance of many small human acts of kindness that are integral to our survival and are being eroded as a result of our increasingly fragmented and polarised societies.

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I Don't Believe You

At some point in our lives, we all make choices that are out of character not expected from for us or that do not necessarily fit into our usual environment. The feeling of going against the tide, of choosing something different for ourselves is very powerful. And even if we persevere with the choices we make, the pressure on us to be and live in a certain way is so great that it confuses us. Particularly now when we live in an age of homogeneity that is fed by marketing campaigns that influence us all to behave in the same way.

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Final Note: The Common Good

One of the side effects of progress is that it is contributing to the dehumanization of our societies and the loss of basic human values ​​such as intuition, consciousness, the ability to be in the moment and the importance of our personal and collective identity. The volatile expectations of achieving certain symbols of progress as guarantors of happiness have alienated human beings from the pillars of humanity.

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