Chaco Canyon, New Mexico Memories 2007
After two
 days “off the grid” at Chaco Culture National Historical Park, I 
reemerged into my normal “wired” lifestyle. As of this writing, I am in 
Taos, New Mexico, where I will attend the   Quantum Leap Celebration.   The Celebration starts later today and will extend across the next two days.
If you visit Chaco Canyon,   you will find its geographical features as interesting as its ancient   culture. The    Pre-Puebloan “Chaco Culture” is on of the great mysteries of the past     millennium. In the high and   dry Canyonlands of   Northwestern New Mexico,
   native cultures rose and fell between 600 CE and 1250 CE. During that
 time, the populous built masonry buildings of great elegance and unique
 architectural style. 
Everyone 
loves a mystery. Why else would people flock to this desolate and 
long-deserted place? We   all want to know who they were, what they were
 doing here and where they went. To learn more about this now vanished 
culture, I suggest reading “  House of Rain:
 Tracking a Vanished Civilization Across the American Southwest”, by 
author Craig Childs. With   scholarly detail and down-home story 
telling, Craig brings ancient sandstone   haunts back to life.
While in Chaco, I sought out the least-visited great house, known as   Kin Klizhin,
 which is nine miles out a 4-wheel-drive road. On the road, the only 
living things I saw were birds and a herd of elk. When I arrived at the 
  Kin Klizhin Ruin,
 the visitors’ register indicated that I was the first person to visit 
there in the past six days. With no mobile telephone, no radio and no 
sounds other than the wind, I spent a couple of peaceful hours there.  
Occasionally, I ducked behind ruined walls, seeking shade from the hot 
afternoon sun.
Sometimes,
 our lives feel overfilled with actions and activities. Although there 
is apparent loneliness to places like Kin Klizhin,   I found it ironic 
that it was once a “welcoming center”
 for the Chaco Canyon Culture. For the fast-walking Pre-Puebloans, Kin 
Klizhin was less than one day away from the combination Mecca, Las 
Vegas, World’s Fair, Vatican, Angkor Watt, Taj Mahal, which we now call 
Chaco Canyon.
Why did they come to   Chaco Canyon? Why
 did they leave? These questions are simple, but definitive answers   
continue to elude us. From my perspective, I believe that a unique, but 
inexplicable   group consciousness arose then in the   Four Corners, centering itself in Chaco Canyon. With its   celestial   aspects, geographical features and ancient cultural alignments, we look   forward to our next visit.
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