Connectivity Challenges

Connectivity Challenges

 

Awake in Belgrade, Serbia, at three a.m.

Jet lag isn’t just about being tired—it’s more like being unmoored in time. Thoughts arrive more slowly, as if my brain is still back in Snohomish and everything has to travel a longer distance to reach me. Even small decisions take effort. I’ll stand in the kitchen and forget what I came there for.

My thinking feels… disconnected.

Connectivity (noun): the state or extent of being connected or interconnected.

It’s such a clean, reassuring definition—suggesting things that work as they should. Signals sent. Signals received. No friction. No interruption. We expect it from our internet, our electrical grids, our nervous systems.

But real life is messier.

My phone doesn’t work. Neither does the so-called premium cable package. Each sink in our apartment has its own temperamental water heater.

Laundry comes out stiff from the hard water. I stand in the grocery store knowing exactly what I need, but unable to read the labels.

Most of the time, I’m guessing.

 

And in that not-knowing, something quieter begins to surface…

I’m paying attention in a different way. Watching how people move through the city. Listening to the rise and fall of conversations I can’t fully understand. Noticing small kindnesses—someone offering me a seat on the bus, a shared smile when words fail. People here don’t smile as readily, so a smile is like found treasure.

Connection still happens. Just differently.

I’m out of sync in many ways, still reaching for systems that no longer quite fit. But I’m beginning to see that connectivity isn’t something fixed. It isn’t something we carry intact from one place to another.

It’s something we rebuild.

And this in-between space—this stretch of disconnection—is offering something I didn’t expect: the chance to be more present. To slow down. To look more closely. To find new ways of connecting that don’t rely on fluency or control, but on attention, patience, and a willingness to be open.

For now, that’s enough.

Thank you, as always, for reading and for being part of this journey.

Warmly,
Lya

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