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Miracle and Wonder

Miracle and Wonder

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Episode Eight begins with a record player on a porch, a full moon rising overhead, and an old copy of Graceland spinning in honor of the narrator's late sister Lisa. What follows is a gentle remembrance of a woman whose way of seeing the world continues to echo long after she is gone.

As the music drifts through the evening, conversations with his sister Lauren uncover stories both ordinary and remarkable. Lisa taught art, collected feathers, created intricate feather chickens with Indigenous artisans, and had an unusual habit of asking children to close their eyes before making anything. She seemed less interested in success than in wonder, less concerned with outcomes than with helping people notice what was already there.

The episode wanders through memories, music, technology, creativity, and the strange fate of miracles. Long-distance phone calls, satellites, medicine, and songs that once felt futuristic have all become ordinary. Yet the narrator suspects that the ordinary may be where wonder lives in the first place.

Filled with humor, affection, and small observations—a troublesome tooth, ants conducting their nightly business, a neighbor passing beneath the moon—the episode carries the easy rhythm of someone remembering aloud.

At its center, Miracle and Wonder is about attention: the increasingly rare act of pausing long enough to appreciate what surrounds us. Like the music playing softly in the background, the episode suggests that wonder has not disappeared from the world. We may simply have become accustomed to it.

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