Sophia was in a hurry. She’d just finished working 16 hours in the lab and she was feeling fried. She spent the 5 minute walk from her station to her her car catching up on all of her social media apps. She despised notifications.
Just outside the front doors Sophia bumped into Tiffany, who was gazing up at the night sky.
“Oh sorry, I didn’t…” Sophia began, “what are you doing?” she finished quizzically.
“Trying to be a bit more human,” Tiffany replied in a sibyllic tone.
“You are trying. . .“
“To be more human,” Tiffany finished, “I’m looking at the stars.”
Sophia glanced up, “There aren’t really any stars out, the light pollution is too bright.”
“You can see Orion’s Belt, Ursa Major, and Minor, oh and that is Venus.” Tiffany pointed out.
Sophia looked at Tiffany as if she had swallowed a goldfish before her eyes. Sophia shook her head and walked to her car thinking.
Instead of driving home Sophia drove out of the city to find the stars.
Sophia drove to the smallest town she knew, only 55,000 people, they had to have stars there. Not enough.
Four hours and 320 miles later Sophia drove up a back road into the sagebrush.
She looked up to find the sky bursting with stars, and it took her breath away.
Somehow, seeing all that vastness she found a greater purpose, she knew what it meant to be human.