From Latin. That lasts, works, is done or extends without interruption.
Without interruption … continuously … that’s the way it is. The only permanent as posed by Heraclitus. Impermanence from a western world where everything seems indestructible. A narrative that goes beyond the temporal although it tries to appear linear, but within its linearity alludes to the circular, to the cycles of life, to that nakedness of its leaves and that clothing of its branches, to those dry leaves and those leaves that begin to grow, to which they fall and to which they adhere, in short, to transformation and metamorphosis.