# The Art of Tripping

## When Feet Meet the Ground

Some of the best moments in life happen when we lose our balance. Not the dramatic kind, not the falling-down-stairs variety, but the small, honest trips that remind us we are moving through a world that was never perfectly smooth. A raised sidewalk edge, a tree root, the unexpected crack in the path. Each one interrupts our stride and pulls us back into the present.

I have come to see tripping as a kind of gentle teacher. It never arrives with fanfare. It simply says, pay attention. The body jolts. The mind catches up a half-second later. For that brief moment everything narrows to the simple fact of being here, now, on this particular patch of earth.

## Learning the Rhythm

Most of us walk through our days trying to stay upright and in control. We make plans. We keep pace. We look ahead. Tripping breaks that illusion. It shows us that perfect control was never really ours. The ground has its own ideas.

There is humility in that discovery. After the small shock comes a quiet laugh, or at least a softer step. We slow down. We look more carefully at where our feet are landing. The path feels more real once we have stumbled on it.

Children understand this better than adults. They trip, they tumble, they get up laughing. Somewhere along the way many of us lose that easy recovery. We start treating every misstep as failure instead of information.

## The Grace of Recovery

The beauty is not in avoiding the trip. The beauty lives in the recovery, that small, instinctive dance the body does to regain balance. Muscles tighten, arms adjust, breath catches. In less than a second the system rights itself. No drama. No blame. Just continuation.

We carry the same capacity in every other part of life. Plans fall apart. Conversations go sideways. Hearts stumble. The question is never whether we will trip. The question is whether we will let the ground teach us how to walk again, a little more awake than before.

*Even the path itself is learning how to meet us.*