We aren’t alone when we hike by ourselves. If we respect nature, it will be a
companion who walks alongside us.
It will share itself with us, sometimes conversing so loudly in a waterfall
that we can’t hear ourselves think, and sometimes murmuring so quietly in a
creek that we have to get down on our knees to hear what it is saying.
We don’t have to hike very far to feel nature’s
presence. We can sit and let
nature come to us. After half an
hour, the birds and animals will set their caution aside and resume what they
were doing. As we watch them go
about their daily lives, we discover the many ways that we are kin. And when I
am tired and silent, I lean back into nature’s arms and listen to the world we
share.
We can also hike on and on without ever stopping until our
senses overload from all the beauty and the endless discoveries and we fall
mute in ecstasy.
When we begin to hike, we head off on a trail eager to
discover what it will show us.
When the trail starts to head up a mountain, we take another trail to
stay under the trees, or along the river, or in the meadow, unless, of course,
we want the challenge of going up the steep side of the mountain. We pause when we want to linger in a
setting where we feel a presence, then move until we feel drawn to stop again.
Nature meets us where we are and guides us further down the
path into our thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. Nature also challenges us by bringing mysteries for us to
ponder by the campfire at night.
When we listen to nature, we hear our own wilderness
respond.
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