From a sky less than friendly, I peer into a canyon most certainly grand, sun-carved and ancient, a wound in the earth so deep and wide it makes even the clouds go quiet. The plane hums its bored little song, coffee sloshing in plastic cups, strangers flipping pages or dozing off, while below us lies a cathedral built by patience and the slow insistence of time. I press my forehead to the window, watching shadows stretch like long, tired arms, and I’m struck, again by how small we are, how big the world is, and how many miracles we miss because the seatbelt sign is on and we’re trying to find a comfortable way to sit with our own thoughts. Still, for a moment, turbulence and all, the sky opens, the canyon waits, and I remember that even on an ordinary flight to a place I’ve been before, the world can surprise me… if I’m willing to look down when everything else tells me to look away. -Stephen Ango Oliver 11/12/2022 & Edited 11/12/2025