16 January

Disney’s Dreams: The Carousel Of Progress

by Jon Katz
Carousel Of Progress
Carousel Of Progress

The Carousel of Progress has survived many revolutions and it sits by itself on the edge of Tomorrowland, dramatically overshadowed by magic mountains and haunted houses and mermaid castles. It is a milestone in Walt Disney’s lifelong obsession with technology. He built it for the World’s Fair in 1965, he personally supervised every detail of it, it is a funky old pre-digital thing, a carousel that turns and reveals the wonders that technology has brought to us – running water, heat, electricity, refrigerators and electric stoves.

He insisted it be moved to Disney World and remain there, and he loved it so much his successors have honored his wishes, although I would not be surprised to see it vanish one day.

More than anything else in Disney World, it is a very personal reflection of Disney’s own experience of technology, he had a child-like awe of it, and very romantic notion of it: it would make the world a better, safer and more wonderful place. Disney was a very complex man, but his view of technology was not.

On the carousel, a stage turns and we follow a family and their dog as technology changes and improves their lives, and we all ending up singing about a better tomorrow. Technology has changed the world beyond even Disney’s brilliant imagination, but our view of it is more nuanced – it brings good things, it takes good things away.

Disney’s Midwestern idea about America seems pretty one-dimensional now, even saccharine, but in his lifetime it was very much true that technology radically altered the life of American families, and for the better. He saw his mother get running water so she didn’t have to walk to the well, and his family get heat and light. Those were big changes in his life.

Disney was a Midwesterner at heart, and a romantic. He revered science, and he thought engineers and scientists could make the world a nearly perfect place, and Disney World is a reflection of this simplistic and satisfying vision, one of the many reasons so many people love to go there. It is a lot more fun that reading the news.

Like a lot of people when they age, Disney did not change much in his later years, and he did not grasp how much America was changing or how much technology would run away faster than our ability to grasp it’s importance or keep up with it. I think it is precisely that nostalgic and simplistic view of technology – and of America – that people love so much about Disney World. It is a reassuring place, it speaks to values and dreams that were simpler, and it speaks to common ideas that are appealing in a country so polarized.

We know now that technology is, in fact, a powerful force, but the tragedy of technology is that it takes something away for everything it brings, that is the deal with the devil.

There was no  suffocating “left” and “right” dominating politics  in Disney’s time, just a people largely united around the idea of a country whose technology would brighten our  future had no limit,  and whose tomorrows would never stop getting better. You can see his passion for this idea in the Carousel Of Progress. May it stand forever.

16 January

Family Tree

by Jon Katz
Family Tree
Family Tree

There is a powerful sense of family at Disney World, families come there from all over the world and they all seem to want to record images of their visit. Maria and I are working to build family into our lives, we are family to each other now, and that is a sad and difficult thing. Sometimes I feed sad at the power of family, and it’s centrality to this uniquely American experience. It is always a lift to see so many children smiling, it speaks to the way the world should work.

16 January

Relaxation Is Exhausting

by Jon Katz
Relaxation Is Exhausting
Relaxation Is Exhausting

I love this shot of a couple at Epcot, they were simply shot at the end of the day. So were we. Maria and I do not know how to relax, we discover. Today was a carefully planned day, a trip to the Animal Kingdom, an afternoon of rest, an evening search for dinner. As it turned out, we were on the move from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m., I thought my feet were going to fall off. We just don’t really know how to stop.

Last night, we went to the Chinese Pavilion at Epcot and it is ironic, but we had perhaps the worst Chinese food I can ever recall having – how can the Chinese screw up vegetable fried rice? Tonight, we had a great Mexican dinner at the (relatively) new Cantina by the water. It was great. We have two full days left on our vacation, we did sun in the sun on a bench at Epcot for a half hour or so and I rubbed Maria’s feet. Some women offered to pay me to rub theirs. I told them I would get back to them.

It seems that relaxing is exhausting. I walked six miles today, blisters or no, and I felt good about all my cardiac rehab work. Blisters will not stop me. Tomorrow, we plan to visit the Magic Kingdom in the morning, and then relax in the afternoon. We’ll see what that means.

16 January

Bollywood Dancing

by Jon Katz
Bollywood Dancing
Bollywood Dancing

We walked past some Bollywood dancers from India at the Animal Kingdom and I was invited by these beautiful dancers to join in, so I did. I love dancing, to be honest, although my blisters did not. But I had a blast and Maria, the wretch, was holding my camera, so I got a taste of my own medicine. Fair enough, I hope to back this weekend and dance some more.

16 January

My Favorite Place. Magic And The Heart

by Jon Katz
Bedlam Farm Place
Bedlam Farm Place

There are quiet places in Disney World, you have to look for them, but they are there, and Maria and I find ourselves drawn to them. Yesterday, we rented a small Whaler and rode around the large man-made lakes that are at the heart of Disney World, a mammoth construction project. There are several islands where the natural Florida swamp habitat has been preserved, and we drove around them.

Perhaps because we live on a farm, we are drawn to the the quiet and peace more than the teeming crowds. It is always a gift to go away, because then you get to realize who you are and where you belong. I have always enjoyed Disney World, and love it still, but my favorite place on the earth is Bedlam Farm. it is the true mystical and magical place for me, a place of love and connection and creativity and meaning.

I do not miss it this week, we needed to get away, but it is a great gift to belong so powerfully to a place. I think of Simon, Lenore, Red and the sheep and Lulu and Fanny and the foolish chickens and Maria in her studio and me in mine, writing on my blog, living in a wonderful small town where people know one another and care for each other.

It is who I am, where I belong, crisis and mystery is there, my blood, my life and my soul, the home of my refurbished heart. Today, we head back to the Animal Kingdom, I am hobbling on new blisters, we are trying Mexican food, we’ll return to Epcot to brood on Walt Disney’s mangled vision of the future, and right about it. This week, this is a good place to be, but I am so lucky to live in my favorite place in the world and to be going back in a few days.  This is a great respite from life, but it is not life, and life is my fuel and sustenance.

We are relaxing, resting, having fun observing.

So much is awaiting  us, so much live to life, so much loving to do, so many things to write and photos to take and animals to study.

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