Sometimes we can look into a dew drop or a blade of grass and see how small and interconnected the world is. For me this trip has already given me two reminders of this truth of reality. The first came when my plane to Salt Lake had to turn around mid-flight for mechanical repairs. So instead of Salt Lake, I wound up flying to Seattle and not just to Seattle, but because of the air traffic congestion at Sea-Tac airport, we flew out over Pugeot Sound.
I found myself thinking: I just drove 3 hours west to Spokane, to fly another hour west just to get the quickest/cheapest flight four hours east. Not only is the world (of air travel) vastly interconnected, but it is so in ways that go well beyond simple comprehension.The second lesson was in meeting up, at last, with Danny Fisher (that’s him), a guy I’ve ‘known’ only through the blog-world and email (and most recenly facebook) for perhaps a couple years now.

But at the same time many of us feel it growing less ‘deep’ as well. Danny told me of a paper given last night in which the woman presenting spoke of the damaging effects of such online networking sights as facebook. Does our mobility wither our roots? Is it more within our roots or in this new sense of interconnectedness that spiritual practices and awakening are to be found? Is a small world necessarily a (psychologically) disorienting one? Was there ever a ‘golden age’ back when real social fiber held communities and individuals together in a way it no longer does?



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* the above paintings are in the Chicago Art Institute Museum. Definitely worth a visit if you’re in town.