In literature and art, there is a genre known as magical realism. In essence, in art it is an aesthetic style in which fantastic or dreamlike elements combine with realism. The genre as an art style began in the years following the First World War. Writer Franz Roh coined the term “magical realism” in 1925 when referring to art that held within its subject a mystery or secret. In other words, in the subject matter of a painting or novel, ordinary elements would be present, but there would also exist the extraordinary—fantastical or magical aspects. Andrew Wyeth’s painting, Christina’s World, and the novels of Gabriel Garcia Marquez characterize works of magical realism. In the former, you see a young lass, perhaps a schoolgirl, looking at a distant farm from where she sits in a field. On closer examination, the girl isn’t a girl at all but Christina Olsen, a disabled woman in her fifties with thin, deformed arms who is dragging herself toward her rural farmhouse. As the viewer, you may think you know what you are seeing; however, magical realism illustrates that magic and mystery and phenomena, that you may not immediately decipher correctly, can hide in plain sight.
Life works that way too. The angels can help you dig deeper to better understand the magic in life that is just below the surface. You may not understand how it works or exactly when it will work, but you can trust that it is there. In times of need or desire, you can call upon that invisible angel network, summoning its power and energy to work miracles in your ordinary everyday life.