The Bridge
continued
And with this realization, the world in my head reassembled itself. Like all American school
kids in the 1930s and '40s, I'd grown up gazing at a Mercator Projection wall map of the
world: the United States at the center, symmetrically framed by oceans, Europe off on the
right, Asia on the left. Now I felt geography come apart, slide, and shift like the ice
breaking up on the river beneath us.
Redrawn Map
When the motion stopped, Paris was at the center. I felt the vast Eurasian continent
stretching eastward thousands of miles to the Pacific. Saw America somewhat as I'd always
thought of Australia, far away across an endless expanse of sea. I felt the ache of those
many-times-great-grandparents when the sons and daughters who were my ancestors left the
farms and villages that had been home time out of mind.
All this just crossing a bridge.
"Can we walk a little faster?" John said. "My ears are freezing."
We strode briskly along the rue de Rivoli while I wondered how to explain that, suddenly, I
didn't want a berth on a boat. The ticket office was just ahead. But now it was John who
slowed his pace.
"Honey," he said, stopping in the middle of the sidewalk, "I don't know how to put this. I
know you want to go home, and I thought I did too. But just on the way here, all at once I
knew -- this is home."
This is the way perspective changes, the saints tell us, when we make heaven our homeland.
What was central moves to the edges, while something that was only a name becomes the place
from which we measure every distance.
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