# The Gentle Art of Tripping

## When Feet Meet the Unexpected

Some of the best moments arrive when we lose our footing. Not in the dramatic sense of falling hard, but in the quiet, everyday way a root catches your shoe or a loose stone shifts under your step. Tripping reminds us that the path we imagine, straight and sure, is rarely the one we actually walk. The world has its own ideas.

I have come to see these small interruptions as kind teachers. They slow us down. They force our eyes from the distant horizon to the ground right in front of us. In that sudden attention we notice things we would otherwise miss: the pattern of moss on stone, the way light falls between leaves, the sound of our own surprised laughter.

## Learning to Recover

The recovery after a trip matters more than the stumble itself. Some people tense up, fight for balance, and exhaust themselves. Others relax into the movement, let their body find its new center, and keep going. The difference is trust, trust that our legs know what to do even when our minds are startled.

This feels like a useful way to think about larger disruptions in life. Plans change. People leave. Directions that once seemed obvious become impossible. The question is not whether we will trip, but whether we can find grace in the recovery. Can we absorb the shock without turning it into bitterness?

- A trip can wake us up.
- A trip can point us toward beauty we had stopped seeing.
- A trip can teach us that control is mostly an illusion anyway.

## The Ground Is Kind

The earth does not judge our clumsiness. It simply waits there, solid and patient, ready to meet us again each time we regain our balance. There is something reassuring in that reliability. No matter how many times we lose our rhythm, the ground stays.

*On this ordinary July day, I am grateful for every small trip that has brought me here, still walking.*