# The Gentle Art of Tripping

## Moments That Interrupt Us

We all trip. Not just on uneven pavement or a loose shoelace, but on the small surprises life places in our path. A forgotten name, an unexpected emotion, a memory that surfaces without warning. These stumbles rarely feel welcome in the moment. Yet they slow us down just enough to notice what we had been rushing past.

On a warm evening in early July, I watched my neighbor's young daughter learn to walk across their backyard. She fell often. Each time she landed softly in the grass, she would pause, look around as if seeing the world anew, then push herself up with quiet determination. There was no shame in her falls, only continuation. Her small trips became the rhythm of her progress.

## What the Ground Teaches

When we trip, we meet the ground. For a brief second everything tilts. Our plans scatter. Our attention snaps into the present. The ground itself, usually ignored, becomes suddenly intimate. We feel its texture against our hands. We notice its temperature. We remember that we are bodies moving through a physical world that was never obligated to be smooth.

These interruptions carry a quiet wisdom. They remind us that control is mostly an illusion. The path will never be perfectly clear. Something will always rise up to meet us when we least expect it.

- A misplaced toy
- An overlooked detail
- A change of heart

Each one an opportunity to begin again, slightly different than before.

## Finding Grace in the Recovery

The beauty lives not in never falling, but in how we rise. Some people trip and curse the ground. Others trip and laugh at themselves. The latter seem to move through life with lighter steps. They have made friends with imperfection.

*Even our stumbles can point us toward grace.*