Zion to Salt Lake City: Life on Earth

in photography •  7 years ago  (edited)

"The west is the best.....the west is the besssssst."

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I could hear Jim Morrison's voice in my head radio as we pulled into the 4,200 mile high city. With both my ears and eyes popping, I gazed upon the city that millions of people consider the holy land.

Earlier in the day, we hiked one of the most dangerous trails in any of the US National Parks. We scaled Angel's Landing trail at Zion. This trail is super technical, steep, scary and should not be attempted by just anyone. And for good reason: A 13 yr old girl fell to her death on the very same day we hiked it. Tragically it happened 2 hours after we left.

CBS News

The girl's fall sent chills down my spine. I mean, what are the odds that we hiked this very trail the exact same day that 1 out of 7 total fatalities that have occurred since 1994? This a huge hiking destination, so thousands of people attempt it every year. As we pulled into Salt Lake City, I prayed for this young girl's family as I blankly stared out the window in deep contemplation of how preciously fragile life is. I cannot imagine the pain they must be in.

Today I rose around 6AM, still with a knot in my stomach from what happened so close to me in Zion, but I had to keep moving onward. After a cup of coffee, we decided to check out the natural history museum of Utah.

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So many dinosaurs!

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I was overwhelmed with the sense of how small we are compared to our time on this planet. We as humans are mere blip on a extremely long timeline.

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Archeologists cleaning a T-Rex skull

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Crystals
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The museum reminded me, once again, how insignificantly small we are on a cosmic timeline. All week I've been reminded of this. The desert has a great way of giving one a grand big sky perspective of this micro to macro machine of life we are all participating in.

When we left the museum, we decided to head to the main Mormon Temple here in SLC. Before today I knew nothing about the Mormon religion. I'm so glad we went.

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Door into the Temple

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We were greated warmly by devoted Mormons who took the time to tell us about their faith, history, family, artwork, etc. I was so amazed at their kindness and eagerness to welcome us into their world.

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The Mormons are quite literally the folks who practice what they preach. Family values, hard work, perseverance, Golden Rule, etc. Everyone we passed greeted us with "Hello" as they passed and I had genuine sense of true kindness within the temple grounds. I was honored to be there.

Later, we walked around SLC for our last night on this wandering desert road trip and just recapped about all that had happened. I've realized a lot on this trip. I'll explain more when I get home. Stay tuned....

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Never stop exploring,

LeeJ

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Wow. What a day. Well... congrats on making the hike safely. That's a big deal. Always so hard to face tragedy when it's so close. Yes, life is fragile. Precious.

Good for you for putting things into perspective with the trip to the museum. I haven't seen dinasour bones in a long time. And I always loved the mineral displays. Have you been to the Denver Museum? Amazing mineral displays there (from what I remember... it's been a while. Like, two decades.)

It was perfect ending to a wonderful trip.

They dint get any better than this. Nice job brother! UV resteem

The architecture of that Mormon temple looks exquisite and breathtaking! Those glass interconnecting panels are so cool!

As a result, without knowing it, Americans live in a land of ghost.

I often find my thought gravitating towards the fact that this planet is, at this point, basically a mass grave steeped in 5 mass extinctions and centuries upon centuries of only the strong surviving... until the aren't.

Your reflection is one I mirror, grateful to be here and all to aware of how small I am in a tapestry so complex that I can't even see the threads around me, let alone the billions that make up the big picture.

introspective read @sweetscience, thank you for taking the time.