Randy, this gives me an excuse to share this poem, from her book, The Magical Approach by Jane Roberts: "Magic is public as the air, so obvious and clear that it appears invisible. And we look through it at the world, which rises up about us everywhere. When we wake up in the morning, the world is always there waiting. We never catch it coming or going, and no smallest part of it disappears before our eyes, but stays intact. But all of that implies just too much precision to happen all by itself, a whole world mysteriously appearing out of nowhere, putting itself together just right without instructions or previous experience. Such a masterly production makes me think instead that there are clues we've overlooked. We like to think that chance alone collected the pieces of the world, stitching together the continents, turning the dumb elements into fish and fowl, and you and me, finally. Of Master Magicians whose conjurings feature the amazing tricks of space and time, produced so skillfully and fast that we're dazzled with the effects, and miss the magical slights of hand beneath the flashy gestures of the days and nights, Producing from its magical bag of tricks, one marvelous form of life after another, fish, bird, monkey, man (not just one dove or rabbit) with a skill and swiftness so astute that our wise men think one turns into the other! Juggling a million million atoms all at once, spinning them into twirling cells of men and whales, tricky, spinning solid mountains from thin air, with fish transformed into flying birds -- Now that's a Magic Show!" (I took liberty with the spacing. The poem has 3 -4 words to a line; takes up 3 pages in the book.) How many libraries would your map fill, Randy? I wonder. Blessings, Jann McGuire In a message dated 7/18/2012 9:34:20 A.M. Pacific Daylight Time, rcwmbw@yahoo.com writes: it would be interesting if it were possible to map out all the interdependent pieces and entities within our universe and somehow depict the interactions and their influence and effects. That would perhaps help answer the question of who is the "we" that must learn to be together.