Spin The Globe continued

that many people have when they are given a message from the intuitive voice within. It asks us to do things that are inconvenient, non-sensible, "unreasonable"... in short, things that don't fit into our schedules and timetables. He explained that the problem with these messages, or rather, the reason that we don't act upon them and see what the future has in store for us is that these requests/messages scare us; for one reason or another listening to this intuitive voice requires a change of one sort or another. Acting on the information we

receive demands we take a risk.

We plowed through many difficult and abstruse texts, and when the material was out of my reach, I began to daydream. One day while fading out during a dialogue about a particularly difficult passage, my mind wandered to the topic of choice which for that day was "my gripes with modern life" – how programmed we've all become, how much we are victims of our own routines, how we are discouraged to do anything that isn't logical, how dreams remain unfulfilled ideas for one reason or another. We live in a world where whimsical behavior and hunches are looked down upon.

Sometime during that mental banter, I dreamed up Spin The Globe, a journey to seven places which are decided upon from 7 random spins of a globe.

Why 7 you may ask? The 7 seas, the 7 sacraments, the 7 liberal arts, 7 notes of a western scale, 7 ages of man cited by Shakespeare, 7 steps leading to the Temple of Wisdom. The list goes on. It's a good number.

Spin The Globe was inspired by a passion for travel, the spirit of "why not?", the curiosity of the unknown and