Carson City artist Carol Foldvary Anderson recently sent me some of her calligraphy on small rectangles of paper. One says: โ€œInspiration is holding on to a goal and not letting go.โ€

Maybe inspiration was what we sought Monday under the Reno arch on North Virginia Street, where folks gathered to greet the arrival of the Olympic torch in downtown Reno.

โ€œWanna go see the torch?โ€ I asked co-workers.

โ€œItโ€™s windy,โ€ staff writer Carli Cutchin noted. โ€œCanโ€™t they postpone it or something?โ€

By myself, I fought my way up the Seventh Street wind tunnel and on to North Virginia, where tall buildings broke the breeze.

A woman approached me. โ€œDo you have a dollar? My friend and I need to catch a bus.โ€ I gave her a dollar. While walking away, I heard her say to her boyfriend: โ€œNow we only need one more dollar.โ€ I wondered why she hadnโ€™t asked for $2.

Then, a plastic bag floated past, reminding me of that unforgettable scene in the movie American Beauty. The bag rode on the wind like a kite, up past the Eldorado sign. It disappeared above the tallest hotel tower. Looking back down, I saw a street littered with flying bits of tumbleweed, McDonaldโ€™s cups, papers.

Under the arch, the choir from Elizabeth Lenz Elementary School sang songs about love and peace and unity, interrupted only by the loud arrival of an Amtrak train a block away. When it was time for more students to walk through with 160 flags from countries participating in the globally unifying sports event, emcee Renee Phillips, a Channel 4 anchor, couldnโ€™t seem to locate the youths or the flags.

โ€œI donโ€™t see the flags,โ€ she said. โ€œI see an American flag. And thatโ€™s good enough, right?โ€

Vice Mayor Dave Rigdon talked about Greek historyโ€”torchbearers were originally seen as โ€œheralders of peace.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s no better time for our country to spread the message of peace throughout the world,โ€ Rigdon said.

A representative of one of the Olympicsโ€™ major corporate sponsors, Coke, gave away pins while I counted the 11 burned-out bulbs on the underside of the arch. Coke and Chevy logos were everywhereโ€”on the stage, on shirts, printed on plastic flags.

โ€œThe sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a lightโ€ฆโ€ a voice boomed over the loudspeaker.

The Spanish Springs High School choir took the stage and sang โ€œCarry the Flameโ€ as the kids with 160 flags finally arrived. Then, running up the street, came Jessica Young, torch in hand. Young was nominated to be a torchbearer after she donated a kidney to her sister in April. She took the mic and spoke simply, honestly about being moved with love for her family, her community and her world.

Her three-pound torch ignited a huge kettle of flame, from a fire thatโ€™s moved across our nation, kindling something hard to describe. Something not entirely eclipsed by corporate logos.

One of Carolโ€™s notes came to mind as I watched a new bearer of the torch continue north toward the University of Nevada, Reno:

“Inspiration is taking an idea and running with it.”

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