We’ve all had those less-than-notable-at-the-time yet ultra-significant inflections in our world view that in later days loom large.
I had one of those “moments” in 1993, on an otherwise ordinary fall day when I’d squired my not-yet wife to an unmemorable building on the Northwestern campus, in Chicago. Marie is a Set and Costume Designer so I have to imagine that we were there for some sort of rehearsal, or maybe a design meeting; something about Orpheus Descending at the Chicago Lyric Opera teases at my memory, although given the remove of 22 years the details have faded.
One thing I vividly remember, though, is reading Steven Levy’s “Artificial Life: A Report from the Frontier Where Computers Meet Biology;” a book I picked up at the campus bookstore while waiting for Marie to finish whatever she was doing. She must have been at it for hours because I managed to gulp down something like half of the thickish volume before she emerged from the building.