No Ron, I didn't call you a name. I just think it's ridiculous to take a tropical beach and suck all of the color out of it. I like the irony of going to a very colorful place and taking black and white pictures.
All the layers of buildings and art! I especially like this first picture because it shows the contrast of a cool newer building mural on a very otherwise shabby looking building, and then the not so awesome art at the bottom of the same building. Would you believe that as I look at these pictures I can almost smell the city as we walked and walked and walked? I miss the buildings and art, but not the smells. All of these pictures are within a short walk from our hotel. Seeing a picture is all I can do to share the experience. It isn't enough compared to standing there with my head tilted back trying to take it all in while clutching my purse. In the end we had no safety issues, we just paid attention and we were too worn out by nighttime to venture out, except one magical evening. One day we met a police officer who reminded us to be careful with things in public, like standing out on the street holding out the phone to take a picture. People could ride by on a bike and snatch it....
So many things about Rio that were amazing. At one point we got on the wrong train, or missed a stop, I'm not sure. We turned it into an adventure, walking a new way back to the hotel (although my legs were already aching!) Yet we were rewarded for our troubles. We ended up walking past a park that was currently closed to people. It was surrounded by a wrought iron fence, and I looked in and saw empty benches and the place was full of large rodent things and cats. The two creatures appeared to get along together just fine. Some seemed to be hanging out together. The cats were the same body size as the rat-like things. Except the cats had long tails and the rodents didn'tby have any noticeable butt gear. We got back to the hotel and I lamented that I couldn't even feel my feet at that point. I didn't think we would be walking that much, I didn't wear the right shoes. One night we went to Botafogo for dinner with my friend, and it was dark when we got back on the subw...
When I write a blog I try to consider who I'm writing it for. This blog is a deep dive for my friends and family who know what Adam-ondi-Ahman is. The next post will have the details that anyone could appreciate, but this one will only be special to certain people. You know who you are. I feel deeply blessed that my husband put together a summer trip that started in New York at the Sacred Grove, which is close to Hill Cumorah and other awesome historic sites. It was a terrific launching pad for the lift-off at Adam-ondi-Ahman. It felt like the first part of the trip was a countdown to going to this sacred valley in Missouri. When is a valley not just a valley? When it's a place I've heard of for decades, and sung about in a Church hymn. We drove for an hour on the Missouri roads surrounded by unending green trees soaking up the July sunshine. We came to a fork in the road, gravel to the right or the left? We went to the right, and we stopped at the first place t...
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