I do feel that way. Although ironically, these covid years have taught me to "see" into people on Zoom. Thanks to sequestering, I have students on every continent, and in fact eight people are traveling from various continents for a meet-up-and-hug session -- people who have learned to know and love each other virtually. So, for me it's also something about the heart -- eyes and ears of the heart -- that doesn't require proximity. Space and time don't hold the same weight they used to.
As they say in Blighty, you are 'bang on,' Connie. A dilemma, indeed.
Writing widens the chasm. When we see deep into each others eyes our heart sense enlivens the mystery. Do you feel that way, too?
I do feel that way. Although ironically, these covid years have taught me to "see" into people on Zoom. Thanks to sequestering, I have students on every continent, and in fact eight people are traveling from various continents for a meet-up-and-hug session -- people who have learned to know and love each other virtually. So, for me it's also something about the heart -- eyes and ears of the heart -- that doesn't require proximity. Space and time don't hold the same weight they used to.
I get "seeing in" on Zoom. Long story to tell about love in virtual space.
No question that physical proximity ain't what it used to be :)