# The Gentle Art of Tripping

## When Feet Meet the Unexpected

Some of the most important moments in life begin with a small stumble. Not a dramatic fall, just that quiet interruption when your foot catches on something you did not see. The world tilts for half a second. Your attention snaps back to the ground beneath you. In that brief pause, everything else fades.

I have come to believe that tripping is not only a physical event. It is a metaphor for every time life gently, or sometimes not so gently, pulls us out of autopilot. We walk through days so smoothly that we forget we are walking at all. Then something small, a disappointment, a chance meeting, a quiet realization, trips us. We look up. We notice where we actually are.

## Learning to Stay Curious

The difference between a harmful fall and a useful one often comes down to how softly we let ourselves land. Children trip and laugh. Adults trip and curse. The ground has not changed. Only our response has.

There is a kind of wisdom in learning to trip well. It asks us to remain curious instead of defensive. To ask what this moment is trying to show us rather than rushing to regain our balance and pretend nothing happened. The path is never as straight as we imagine. The small irregularities in it are not obstacles. They are the teachers.

- Notice when you stumble
- Pause before reacting
- Look at what caught your foot

## Coming Back to the Ground

On a warm evening in July, I watched my neighbor's young daughter learn to run. She fell often. Each time she got up with the same bright expression, as if the earth itself had whispered her a secret. I envied her lack of shame. She had not yet learned to walk as if she had something to prove.

We spend so much energy trying to move through life without ever tripping. Perhaps the more honest goal is to trip often and lightly, staying close to the ground that holds us.

*Some paths are found only after we stop walking them perfectly.*