We are in the states. Susie and the kids are on their way to Austin and I to Indianapolis.
Steve Baskin
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Today is our final sightseeing day. Tomorrow we will take 3 flights and be on the go for 23 straight hours. I will spin off from the family in Chicago to fly to Indianapolis for a board meeting of the American Camp Association on Thursday and Friday. I am wondering how cogent I will be, but I am glad that I am able to attend this meeting.
But today is not about board meetings, it our last day in one of the most fascinating cities in the world.
This was our next to last sightseeing day.
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Traveling in London has been quite a change of pace for two reasons. First, it is nice to understand the signs, the tour guides, the TV and the subways. Second, we are so lucky to be staying with friends.
The previous 7 weeks was often a foreign and disorienting experience. We were on our own and dealing with challenges. We had to rely on our wits to navigate the cities while being supportive of each other.
We have loved being in London. After 7 weeks of living in apartments and rented rooms, we are staying with dear friends. I was shocked to learn that we have not seen these friends in person since 1996, yet we picked up as if we had not missed more than a year or two.
Some friendships simply transcend time and place. I am not sure what creates fundamental compatibility, but we have it with this couple of Londoners.
I am writing on a train to London, so this is a wordier blog than normal that does not have as many pictures. As a result, I will throw in a few shots from after our arrival before I go further.
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I feel like a technological failure.
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We went to the Eiffel Tower today.
As a lifelong iconoclast who has eschewed touristy locales, this was a trip I took reluctantly. I lived in New York for 2 years and never visited the Statue of Liberty or the Empire State Building. I like the unexpected discoveries rather than the road most traveled.
But my girls wanted to see the Tower and I am more a daddy than I am an iconoclast.
I am glad we went.
I enjoyed the visit not only because it is a ridiculous feat of engineering, but also because I learned a critical lesson. When you are 46, the lessons come less frequently than when you were a teenager, so I appreciate insight when it happens.
Before I describe my insight, let me share a few interesting facts about the tower.
Gustave Eiffel - A Serious Overachiever
Gustave Eiffel was a bridge builder that won the competition to create the centerpiece of the 1889 Worlds Fair, which was also a celebration of the 100th year since the French Revolution. One of the designs he beat out - a huge guillotine. That would have been a bit awkward I think .
In any event, Eiffel was a very focused and intentional individual. He designed the tower in-house and built the parts in-house as well. He delivered the Tower on time and under budget. It was over 1000 feet high. Prior to its construction, the highest structure in the world was the Washington Monument at roughly 550 feet. The US had wanted to be the first to 1000 feet, but they were beaten by an entrepreneurial Frenchman. On the top of the Tower during the Fair, he met with Thomas Edison who was promoting the phonograph.