It comes as no surprise to anyone that the US had a solar eclipse run across diagonally from Oregon to Georgia. It should also come as no surprise that Nashville, my home, was in the 'Path of Totality' for said Eclipse. What did come as a surprise to me was that I had to work on Aug. 21. At least my office set up to see the eclipse first hand, out on the plaza in front of the building.
One of the guys in our office ordered in some special glasses (yes, the good ones) and we forwarded the phones to voice mail and headed out a good 30 minutes before to the moment of totality.
The plaza was full of folks from all over, and when the moment of totality came, it was breathtaking. In a matter of moments, the sun winked out, and the lights in the adjacent buildings could be seen with the naked eye.
In some areas I'd heard that people shouted and cheered when the sun was covered. At the Nashville zoo the cheering may have caused the animals a bit of concern but here in the downtown, people were a bit louder, but overall it was more a moment of awe. To see something so amazing that could very well be a once-in-a-lifetime moment was enough to make you just stand and watch.
The full totality of darkness lasted only 2 minutes. Then the lights came back as the shadow of the moon moved on. Some people headed on back to work, others standing around using their special glasses to watch the event in it's entirety.
Many years ago, my daughter and I watched a partial eclipse and used a pinhole in a piece of paper to see the shadow travel partially across the sun without looking at it. The light around us then merely dimmed. We still enjoyed it. Oddly, she is living in Cheyenne Wyoming which was also in the path of totality this time around. The next one won't come until 2024 and maybe the two of us will be together again and can travel down to see it.
One can only hope.
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