This vacation has been good for me. I'm sitting here tonight at a friend's computer, long after the friend has gone to bed, pondering the changes brought about by "small moments" during this particular vacation.
I would count as such "small moments" the times I realized that I didn't know it all, and realized that, blessedly, I was still capable of learning new things. Interestingly, the moments that caused such realizations, at least subjectively, have all been "small," in the sense that they would create no blips on anyone's radar. They just happened, and I happened to be in a place where I could appreciate them happening. Moments like: * Watching a seven-month-old girl go completely through the learning-to-crawl thang, start to finish. Awesome. * Finding a wine at the local Super U market and being incapable of passing it by because of its name ("Very Limoux"), buying a couple of bottles for 6 Euros and change, and discovering that it was a wine one could describe as memorable, almost epic. And then discovering, after the fact, that it won a gold medal in Paris in 2007, and that I am far from alone in my appreciation. * Discovering anew that the product that has delivered by far the highest ROI (Return On Investment) for me in this lifetime is now officially my 20-year-old pair of Vasques hiking boots. These boots somehow enable me to walk forever, without fatigue, and have since the day I bought them. * Real food and water. Most of the food I have eaten since I've been here has been picked from the garden of the house I am staying in. The water I"ve drunk comes from the tap, and the well. Both exceed anything I have associated with the words "food" and "water" in recent years. Mmmmmmm. * Families. Possibly because I am vacationing with one, I have been reminded on this Road Trip of the magic of the "family unit." I am vacationing with a unit that is oddly composed of two wives, one husband, one young (and very lovely) daughter, two cats (theirs), two dogs (mine), myself, and a couple of ladyfriends of mine who have visited when they could get away from work. It's made me appreciate the wonderful variety of, and the unvarying magic of, the other families we've run into. * Meditating in a thought-free environment. That's been a veritable "small moment" in itself, living in an area in which if I close my eyes I just "go away" into deep and profound Silence. It's been reminding me how close I must be to going away altogether all the time if all that I require to remember the Silence is to close my eyes. And often not even that. * Reading Fairfield Life selectively. Ever since my own computer's screen died, I've been having to borrow one of my friends' computers to check in here. As a result, not wanting to hog bandwidth from nerds who seem more in need of it than I have been, I've been limiting my FFL-reading sessions to scanning the Message List and determining who and what I want to bother with and then restricting myself to reading only those posts. As a result, FFL now requires less than ten minutes of my day. And if that's not a positive sign, I don't know what is... :-)