Favorites in the agricultural sector.
Agricultural sector? - you ask, looking at the photos of plush toys... what's the connection?
Well, yes, the connection between toys and the difficult work of people in the agricultural sector isn't exactly obvious, like a sheet of foam floating on water, or something else, but the connection is absolutely direct, and many farmers will agree with me.
We're built in such a way that we always prioritize someone or something; we like it more than anyone else, and we have to defend it our whole lives, because only we understand its true value.
Perhaps, as a child, you had toys that were very dear to you for reasons unknown to others; you liked them only you, and you would never want to part with them.
Perhaps your mother offered to throw away the stuffed elephant from the cotrogly (the dust was already falling) and offered to buy you a new toy, but you did not agree to such an exchange, but you had nothing against the new toy.
Similarly, in the anarnos sector, people are forced to set aside their priorities, which many may not like.
For example, your neighbors will be outraged if you keep noisy guinea fowl, geese, or... a donkey on your farm that crows loudly at four-thirty in the morning, causing all the roosters in the area to realize their own worthlessness and stop trampling the hens.
But we, too, often misunderstand others. For example, a neighbor planted a walnut tree near my fence.
He dreamed of such a tree, but I dreamed of never seeing such a neighbor near my garden.
It's strange, but the history of toys that someone doesn't understand is always alive, even in our garden or in the poultry yard.
Zoom in on a photo for a closer view.
More to come!
Enjoy viewing the photos and reading the article!
Have a blessed day!
| Category: | Art, Photography, digital art. |
| Tools: | Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX300 |
| Location: | Ukraine |
| Author: | Author @barski. In my publications you will see only my author's works. |




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That's an interesting perspective on how farmers form attachments to their work, much like how children do with their favorite toys.