A Planet Transiting the Sun - so what? It's just a round speck of dark object crossing the disk of the sun. I can't help myself getting amused by all the commotion surrounding this rare phenomenon. I later learned that this event is so rare that the next one will not happen anymore in my lifetime. Hmmm... interesting. I must have been carried away by my astro friends' enthusiam that on the last minute, I decided to take a day off from work to view and perhaps take a picture of this "very rare celestial event". Weather forecast was not very promising-it was already June so I cannot blame myself when I chose to just stay home and observe there. I set up my scope at our roofdeck, fitted the solar filter and wait for Venus to enter the sun's disk. I had difficulty focusing as it was very cloudy and the sun barely penetrated the thick haze. I fired shots at the appointed time of ingress and continued firing every two or three minutes thereafter. Most of the time it was very cloudy but I stayed. There was a moment when I took a peek at the eyepiece and saw that round speck hovering over the sun's disk among the sunspots. At that instant, something gripped me. I was watching live with my very own eyes the celestial dance of the second planet from the sun. It was really a very small dot against a huge ball of burning gas. Somehow I also felt a bit small. So small and insignificant as a I watched Venus against the backdrop of a brilliant Sun. Then I realized I was not just watching Venus, I was actually watching myself. It's me on Earth-a similar sized planet. Whew, there must be something in the heat of the Sun that made me think in an unusual way. Eventually, heavy clouds covered the spectacle and I started to dismantle my setup.
A Planet Transiting the Sun - so what? It's just a round speck of dark object crossing the disk of the sun. Yes, but I was able to see myself in the perspective of the infinite Universe! Seemed my sunburns were worth it!
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