Times They Are A Changin'

"Times," Bob Dylan famously sang, "They are a changin'." You may have noticed from my earlier post that time and change are on my mind today. As I mentioned the other day, we're in the process of selling our house and moving back to Kansas City.Change always makes me reflective. It also has a tendency to make us want to cling to what is familiar. This morning I sold our 2006 Kia Sorento to the junk man and will be waving goodbye to it for a couple of Ben Franklins.This was the first brand new car April and I bought together back in August of 2005 and was our main family car for many years. This, too, has been coming for a while. In the four years we've been here, it probably hasn't been driven more than 30 times. I put a new battery in it last Fall, but when I went to start it the other day it wouldn't start.This vehicle never let us down. We never had one morning when it was our main car that it didn't answer the call. While it's just metal and plastic in one way. In another, it's memories of trips to Manhattan to watch K-State games and 43,604 trips back and forth up Highway 69 between Louisburg and Overland Park.This move back to Kansas is a new chapter for us. Some things, including this Kia, will not continue on the journey with us.Plato recorded Socrates saying the following. makes "Heraclitus is supposed to say that all things are in motion and nothing at rest; he compares them to the stream of a river, and says that you cannot go into the same river twice"In our modern world, this quote has been culled down to, "You cannot step twice into the same river."Time passes. Everything stays in motion. What was no longer is. What is will soon no longer be. That's the nature of all composite things...cars, rivers, and us.It's only attachment that makes it sad. If we can step back and see the big picture, the awesome symmetry to the whole cosmic dance comes into view. All IS well!Ray