Notes on travel
Fridayβs newsletter was inspired by our recent trip to New Mexico.
It ended on this note about travel:
I am a big believer that travel doesnβt relieve your problems, it throws them into relief. You see your life in a new light and new shadows. The desert light can be good for this. At its peak, it is harsh and unforgiving, but at dusk and dawn it softens, becomes more mysterious. Every trip has its challenges, but I returned home, as I often do, with a sense of perspective and a clarity about what I want to do next. What more could one ask for? (βGo away so you can come back.β)
What I liked most about New Mexico was being in the forests and the deserts outside of town.
In Benjamin Labatutβs The Maniac, a fictional Richard Feynman says:
Los Alamos was high up on a mesa with tall cliffs carved in dark red earth, lots of trees and shrubs all around. The landscape was breathtaking, the most beautiful place Iβd ever seen. Coming from New York, Iβd never traveled out to the West before, so I really felt like I was in another world. In Mars or something. It had the strange energy of a sacred space, a haven far away from the civilized world, away from prying eyes, farther than God could see. The perfect spot to do the unimaginable.
Read more in βThe Land of Enchantment.β