Sometimes it takes a while for things to sink in. Often times you realize the way as it unfolds. The last month of my life has been an incredibly trans formative time, but the lessons and insights are lost in time. To retrieve them requires quiet contemplation and presence, things that have been sacred but scarce for me recently. Over the last month I’ve moved from the east coast by plane, lived in cities, embarked on what was essentially a bicycle powered vision quest, been thrust back into the world of professionalism and academia, then raced off to the desert to shred a motor-less dirt bike. It’s been wild and crazy ride to say the least.
Now, as I regroup, repack, and reload for hopefully another adventure before work grounds me for the winter, I’m trying to keep the presence and perspective I’ve gained through it all. Each night I reflect on what has happened recently and what is really important in life, to live with passion, patience, kindness, and courage. I owe it to myself to remind myself often of life’s fragility, beauty, and awesomeness. As I reflect and digest all that I’ve experienced, I keep wishing I could sit an put my thoughts to words and pictures and share with you all I’ve seen.
But now is the time for movement and I’m still caught in the flow. Soon enough I’ll be able to slow down and transform all I’ve experienced to share with you. It’s clear that another phase of this experiment has begun, the realization. Boundaries are being crossed and limits being expanded, what is really possible and what I’m capable of is being realized like riding through a tunnel towards the light. We’ve found the path and it feels right, I’m continuously overwhelmed with the understanding that this is the way, and it is only a matter of time and my effort to help show others and encourage them to join.
This is just to say that I’m thinking of being here often, excited to share some of the perspective and awesomeness I’ve gleaned over the last few weeks. Emerson put it best when he said that it’s a poet’s job to transform the beauty and wisdom of nature for others to understand, but Terence McKenna’s analogy for psychedelics is apt as well, that we’re all cosmic fisherman, and it’s our responsibility to come back from these journeys with some piece of wisdom to share with the world. Although I haven’t been trippin’ balls recently, I feel like the experiences and realizations I’ve had are like giant creatures from the deep that I’m still trying to reel in. Soon enough I’ll have to weigh and measure them, to prepare them in a way that others can appreciate. If you have the time or the inclination, keep up with us on facebook at Nature of Motion and on instagram @natureofmotion. Until then I’ll continue to search….