Black holes, those enigmatic cosmic voids formed from the collapse of massive stars, could theoretically offer a boundless source of energy to humanity through mechanisms like the Penrose process, where objects entering the ergosphere—a region just outside the event horizon—could extract rotational energy by splitting and ejecting particles at relativistic speeds, potentially powering advanced civilizations with efficiencies far surpassing nuclear fusion. Yet, their strangeness defies intuition: light bends dramatically around the photon sphere, the boundary where photons orbit in unstable paths, creating gravitational lensing that warps distant stars into eerie rings or arcs visible from afar. Even more bizarre, if you were perilously close to this sphere, the extreme curvature of spacetime could allow you to glimpse the back of your own head as light rays loop around, forming a surreal self-portrait from behind. Meanwhile, time itself slows to a crawl due to intense gravitational time dilation; for an observer near the event horizon, seconds might stretch into eons compared to distant watchers, making any energy-harvesting expedition a one-way ticket into temporal isolation.