Each moon is cruel, and every sun bitter:
I’m swollen with harsh love’s drunken torpor.
O let my keel burst! Let me go to the sea!
JOY - Cameron Diaz watching the waves, reconciling on What Happens in Vegas movie.
Water is a source of endless joys and plays. On a warm sunny day, watch kids having fun in it. They constantly create new ways to enjoy water; they swim, dive and dabble in all kinds of positions, jump to it throwing it all over, hit it with the palm of their hands, have water-battles, squirt it from their mouths. Good mood spreads and stays with them for hours – water refreshes their mind and body.
They feel well.
On a beach, by a lake, sea or river, we are more human, closer to our inner selves. We leave the roles that work and society put on us behind, drop them to the sand, to the rocks. We think more clearly.
The Olympic Games of 2004 in Athens had a spectacular opening ceremony. One of the main actors was water. During the ceremony, the center of the Olympic arena was filled with couple of inches thick layer of water – it was like a huge mirror. In Greek culture, water is a symbol of happiness.