Downside
Up
All
my life, I’ve thought of northward on a map as ‘Up,’ southward as ‘Down,’ and
eastward or westward as ‘Over.’ Living in New England, we would
drive ‘up’ to Canada for a summer vacation or ‘down’ to Florida for a mid-winter
warmup, or ‘over’ to New York State to visit my uncle and his family. I
would look ‘down’ at my feet to see if my sneakers were tied or ‘up’ into the
night sky to marvel at the familiar constellation Orion. Everybody
else I knew seemed to observe the same orientations.
Then
a few years ago I went way ‘down’ to Chile in the
Southern Hemisphere to view the night sky from a barren mountaintop high in the
Atacama Desert, where it has not rained in decades and the atmosphere is not
only free of moisture but also free of both air and light pollution. Severe
clear.
The
night sky was spellbinding in its majesty. Impossible to adequately
describe. Venus was casting my shadow onto the ground, I could see
the Andromeda galaxy with my naked eyes, and the legendary Pleiades, those
ancient beautiful seven sisters, were dazzling and nested in a bed of
diamond-like lesser stars I’d never even known were there.
But
the constellation Orion was upside-down. A few other constellations
that I’d been able to see from the Northern Hemisphere and that I could still
see from the Southern Hemisphere were also upside-down. What? I
had to make a sketch on a pocket pad to figure out why. For the
first time I realized there really is no ‘up’ or ‘down’ or ‘over.’ Those
are all merely arbitrary concepts. Weightless astronauts learn this
lesson quickly on arrival at the International Space Station. At any
distance from our home planet, there is no longer any ‘up’ or ‘down.’ Even
on the surface of our planet, if I look ‘down’ at my sneakers and then wait
twelve hours, or half an earth revolution, I’m actually positioned on my head
from where I was twelve hours earlier, looking ‘up’ at my sneakers.
It
was a disconcerting lesson in orientational prejudice. The good
people in Chile have every right to say they’ll go ‘up’ to Antarctica for
penguin-watching or ‘down’ to Maine for photographing moose if they wish, and I
have no right to fault them for it.
Phil
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