Sunday
was technically our last real day in Houston.
I
woke up that morning feeling blessed and loved so I really wanted to do
something to make it extra special.
I
woke up first, got in my car, and headed down the road to Shipley’s Do-nuts
and picked up a dozen (half glazed, half maple) doughnuts and two coffees.
Unfortunately on my way back home for what I thought would be a sweet breakfast
in bed, I ran a red light and got in my first car accident in 7 years. It was
minor really, but at eight in the morning it wasn’t exactly the best way to
start the day.
After
I picked up the rest of my dignity (Big A insisted we continue the weekend head
on and smiles on!), we went out for the day and we had big plans: the Houston
Museum of Natural Science and the Downtown Aquarium.**
The
museum was fun, but for the most part it was a bunch of small exhibits about
science: a lot about oil, a little about space, atoms, and then some random
exhibits featuring artifacts from Egypt and China. But by FAR, the most
incredible exhibit there was the Morian Hall of Paleontology.
I
don’t know a lot about dinosaurs, who does though, really? But I do know more
than most people. Aside from a real obsession with Jurassic Park, I’ve read
loads of books and articles about paleontology. But sadly, I’ve never actually
seen dinosaur bones. But on Sunday all of that changed.
I
walked into the Morian Hall and was taken aback by sight of what was before me.
Creatures bigger than I could imagine stood before me and I stood in awe. It
actually brought me to tears. It was so moving and so incredible. It was an
experience of a lifetime.
“Because the history of evolution is that life
escapes all barriers. Life breaks free. Life expands to new territories.
Painfully, perhaps even dangerously. But life finds a way.”
― Michael Crichton, Jurassic Park