J. Horton Films writes “Bigfoot serves as a reflection of our deep-seated need to explore, to question, and to marvel at the vast unknowns of our world. Until the next mystery unfolds, keep your eyes open, your cameras ready, and your sense of wonder alive.
Thank you for joining us on this journey, and don’t forget to like, share, and subscribe for more intriguing explorations into the unexplained!”
Ron S
This description at the top with the AI art makes the eyes of my hand drawn avatar glow even more brightly red.
Personally, I don’t, and many people don’t feel like a Bigfoot sighting represented any deep need to explore. I felt pretty good the woods was already interesting enough just the way it was before the encounter with just the normal critters in it.
For many witnesses it actually caused a lot of trauma and scared them away from any further or true exploration in the wilderness after a sighting. Some things just shouldn’t be romanticized before they’re understood IMO.
I think it’s safe to say this guy has never actually experienced anything of high strangeness, so his introduction strikes me as being a big pile of Shipton (not that I don’t believe the Shipton story)… I guess I’ll have to rationalize this introduction and gather that he must be directing these words towards others who haven’t had unexplained encounters as well… I’m think I’m going to just breathe now, gimme a minute
Seriously though, I have no idea why some people have encounters of different kinds and levels varying from wonder to absolute terror, and then some don’t have any. I don’t think it’s a matter of choice by doing this-or-that or by simply looking hard enough, it overall feels way more complicated than we might be able to understand.
It seems to me that if a witness can get back to the bipedal position after a strange experience has flipped your world upside down, promptly dropped you head first into a deep rabbit hole, and then after a while you can emerge from the hole and resume life closely to what you had before the sighting, you must be one of the lucky ones… either that or you made the experience work towards benefiting yourself as a learning experience and actually gained something from it such as more faith (like I have). I think that’s honestly the best (maybe the only) way to deal with it. Best way to deal with lots of things actually.
Hope everyone finds themselves some more peace, honesty and knowledge in the outdoors… maybe even more faith too. I believe that’s what it’s there for.