 Hey, Sarah, do you know that in England they actually don't call an elevator an elevator? I did know that. Do you know what they call it? Elevator. No, it's an elevator. Elevator. Elevator. This is funny. We'll see what the people think. Good morning Hickets Tuesday. On Friday I gave the theologiest speech of my life at Harvard's Memorial Church and then boarded a flight for London where our family saw Plow Lane for the first time, a stadium built by its fans for a club, AFC Wimbledon, owned by its fans. The highlight of the match itself was unquestionably the double rainbow that graced us with its presence in the second half. Wimbledon lost 1-0 and never much looked like scoring. As the game ended my daughter looked up at me and I expected her to tell me that it was such a bummer to fly all this way just to see the Don's lose a fourth-tier soccer game. But in fact she said, that was amazing. Also Sarah took this ridiculously perfect picture. It was just thrilling to be there, to see the physical embodiment of what a community can accomplish when it sticks together and has a shared purpose. Getting Plow Lane, a truly magnificent stadium built, was not easy or straightforward. Volunteers worked for two decades on everything from fundraising to planning approval. It was hard and complicated and messy and full of setbacks and discouragements. But when your work is grounded in solidarity and love, it's incredible what you can accomplish. So yeah, we lost on the day, we've lost on a lot of days recently, but Plow Lane itself is an extraordinary victory. Anyway, then we waited on a train platform for the train to emerge out of the darkness like a metaphor, and then we took one of those London escalators that rather resembles an escalator to heaven and made our way to the Freeze London Art Fair, which is perhaps the snootiest event ever to occur inside of a tent. But nonetheless, there was lots of great art there, and I was especially drawn to the landscapes, including these breath-stealingly gorgeous paintings by the Brazilian artist Lucas Arruda and this highly abstracted landscape by the American artist Byron Kim. This beautifully strange undersea scape by the Haitian artist Didier William astonished me as did the Cuban artist Yohan Capote's landscape made of plaster and recycled metal. Even this lovely painting by the American Sam Moyer, combining stones and canvas, seemed a kind of place picture to me as if the whole show was telling me, touch grass. And so we went outside. London was absurdly autumnal, just like Indianapolis is this time of year. We walked and chatted, and I kept thinking about how to talk about the world, this world with grass. What is the opposite of a metaverse? The uh, Terraverse? I love the internet, I have made such wonderful friends here and had so many deep and real experiences. But the internet is a compliment to the Terraverse, not a replacement for it. Look at this light, these trees, and then know that out there, wherever you are, the light is more vivid and the trees more alive than they can ever be on YouTube. When I was recovering from labyrinthitis, my physical therapist told me to go outside for a few minutes a day. At the time, my brain was having to relearn balance, and to do so, it relied more on visual cues than it had in the past, so I was easily overwhelmed by visual information. And I would become immediately dizzy because there was just so much visual information. The leaves wobbling in the wind, squirrels running, clouds moving, light shifting. I still sometimes get vertigo when the quantity of visual information gets too high. But I need to be outside, I need to be in the world, and to remember that I am of it. Hank, I'll see you on Friday.