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ARCHIVED
TOPIC:
[ Line of Sight ]
DATE:
October 9, 2003
Reverence
We
just got back from a two-week vacation (yes, the last two
weekly web updates were done on the road). We toured the
Western/Southwestern United States -- the Redwoods, California,
Arizona, the Petrified Forest, Painted Desert, Utah, Mesa
Verde, and more. Our big goal was the Grand Canyon, however.
The
Grand Canyon may be the most amazing place on earth. You
really have to see it firsthand to understand. I'd seen
pictures and TV and whatnot, but... well, it's really amazing.
Visiting
the Grand Canyon taught me a lot about nature, geology,
and so on, but it also taught me something interesting about
human nature.
As you
approach the Grand Canyon by car, you don't see it ahead
of you. As you get close, you're in a forest (of Ponderosa
Pine). It seems like other forests you've seen: It's pretty,
but nothing special. Then you park your car (if you go in
September, like we did, you can park pretty close). You
still can't see anything, though. You get out and follow
a little trail. You and the people you are with, as well
as the people around you -- who are also parking their cars
and walking up there for the first time -- are talking,
laughing, and so on. What people normally do.
Then,
all at once, you suddenly see it. The Grand Canyon looms
in front of you, almost 10 miles across and thousands of
feet deep. It's huge, and -- what I wasn't expecting --
it's complex. There are ridges and formations and many levels
to the canyon floor. There are thousands of colors presented
to you at once. It is literally breathtaking.
You
and the people around you suddenly become very quiet. No
one says anything. You just stand and stare. You walk slowly
forward to get closer to the edge, and you still say nothing.
Eventually, you turn to whomever you are with and you see
what you are feeling reflected in their faces. And in the
faces of everyone around you. You begin to speak, but it
is in a whisper. You continue to stare for a long time.
There's
really only one word I can think of for what you feel. Reverence.
No matter what kind of person you are, no matter what your
beliefs, you realize that you are in the presence of something
truly awe-inspiring.
There
is one interesting exception, however. As I looked at the
people around me, old and young, obviously from all walks
of life, everyone had the same reaction to the Grand Canyon
-- except for little children.
It had
no effect on them at all. They still laughed and played
and cried like they would at the mall. People always talk
about the wonderful innocence of children (and I don't disagree),
but I realized that reverence is something that you learn.
You acquire it. It's tied with maturity, and with life experience.
There's a certain innate understanding among people when
they are faced with something so big and so amazing, and
you can only gain it if you spend a few years faced with
normal life.
I suppose
in a child's eyes, everything is always big and new, so
none of it is more amazing than any other. But when you
spend years staring at a computer screen, at the back of
the car in front of you, or at your TV, and then come face
to face with something like the Grand Canyon -- even if
you don't understand or care how or why it was created --
you just know that its something special. It's almost a
sacred place. In fact, to the Native Americans of the area,
it's literally a sacred place, and you can see why.
Reverence
is a state that is perhaps only possible in contrast to
the mundane aspects of everyday life. But it's universal.
We were surrounded by people from all over the country and
all over the world, and we all reacted the same. We all
knew to treat this place with special attention. The feeling's
clearly a part of being human.
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