I have always wanted to go to some caverns that aren't too far from our house. Luckily one of our homeschool groups scheduled a field trip there. I was probably a little more excited than the kids were...
It looked like we were driving into the end of the world...
This just made me happy.
This is clear (and gray) quartz. We were deep embedded of our study of Revelation at the time of this field trip, and these just reminded me of Revelation 21.
I was slightly ready to stop seeing Revelation everywhere.
This is your standard postcard shot.
I considered getting one of these for the backyard.
The kids "panned" for gems. It was fun and all the kids enjoyed it. This also reminds me that we were supposed to study out the different gems we got that day.
Um, yeah. Homeschool field trip fail.
The girl kid found some clear glasses in the gift shop and asked me to get them for her. I hesitated, but they were only three dollars and since she was trying to be just like her mother, how could I resist?
That is going to come to a screeching halt soon enough, so why not encourage it for the short time it lasts?
This was the perfect time of year for this field trip. The scenery was breathtaking.
Waiting to go in the caverns. This shot was accidental, but it makes me terrifically happy.
So. Walking down into these caverns was simply an assault on all of my senses. At once. It was amazing. I needed a few minutes to take it all in. It was just surreal. We sat through an informational lecture that was really interesting. They told the history of this particular cavern and a lot of information about the rock formations and things like that. I really liked all of that.
Then. They did this thing called "Total Darkness." I have not in my adult life been scared of much, but when they turned off all of those lights, I was slightly panicked. Part of it was because I also have never experienced dark that all encompassing. You could almost feel it. They kids did fine. I was about twenty seconds away from turning on my cell phone and ruining it for everyone.
I am fine with never doing that again.
I'm afraid of the dark. That dark. Who knew?
And back to Revelation for a second. (I know. I was ready to be done thinking about Revelation too.) When reading and studying the bowls and seals and wrath and destruction, the overthinking planning part of my brain thought (seriously) "Where would I go? Where could the family go?" And I thought of caverns like these. "We'd be safe there! From the fire falling from the sky! From the stinging locust! From the drunk lady on the..." Never mind. Really.
Trust me. I hear the absurdity of that. But it's true. And after the "Total Darkness" debacle, I literally thought, "Well, that won't work." I mean, we wouldn't have cell phones for long, and the flash light batteries wouldn't last long and then what would we do? And this cavern didn't have the water supply that we would need, although all the water is going to dry up anyway...
As ridiculous as it sounds, I'm glad I got to see this fleshed out. I saw how silly it was to try to plan my way out of Revelation.
I'm only typing this all out to (hopefully) remind myself later how ludicrous it is to try to over plan... anything.
So we'll just call this a lesson learned.
Ahem.
Anyway...
We saw a "light show," which was Christmas themed.
We toured the caverns, which was really cool.
After that the kids did a huge maze. I refused to go in. I told one of my friend's husbands that I already knew I wasn't a fan of mazes. I am not a fan of being lost. I sort of do that in real life, literally and metaphorically, enough. I'm sure it's not a control thing at all...
Ahem.
How about a day where you get to face all of your ridiculous fears?
He joked after I confessed my Total Darkness trauma that we could have a high tower that overlooked a pit of snakes and we could just have a cornucopia of realized fears.
That made me laugh. Except I'm not afraid of heights and I'm definitely not afraid of snakes. But dang that darkness nearly did me in.
Anyway, this nice daddy took about 2,962 kids into the maze by himself while the mamas sat outside and had some good conversation. (Insert me being deeply thankful and blessed by the mamas God has so graciously placed in my life.)
Since we had a crazy busy day this day, we headed out shortly after. This was a great trip, and I'm thinking a cavern tour might be in my future. As long as I can figure out this darkness thing. And while I'm not studying Revelation. We can all be thankful that I'm not studying Revelation again for a little while.
Goodness.
1 comment:
i'm so glad ya'll go to go! isn't it a fun place? and, yes, about the total darkness - never have seen anything like that except there.
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