# 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 catch of the toe, the brief loss of rhythm. Your body reminds you that the ground is not always predictable. The path you thought was smooth has its own ideas. In that instant everything narrows to the present moment. You are no longer thinking about where you are going. You are simply here, adjusting. I have come to believe that tripping is not only physical. We trip over assumptions, over old stories we tell ourselves, over expectations that no longer fit. Each time we do, something in us is asked to wake up and notice what is actually there instead of what we imagined. ## Learning to Walk Again After any trip, the next steps are different. They are more careful, more curious. You look a little closer at the ground. You feel the small changes in texture under your soles. The world becomes richer when you stop rushing through it. Children understand this better than adults. Watch a toddler learning to walk. They fall constantly, yet each tumble is simply information. They do not feel shame. They simply get up, slightly wiser, and try again with new attention. Somewhere along the way many of us lose that gentle relationship with falling. ## The Gift Hidden in the Stumble There is a kind of mercy in being interrupted. A trip forces you to slow down, to breathe, to see. It pulls you out of automatic living and places you back into direct contact with reality. In that sense every trip is a small return to beginner's mind. The older I get, the more I value these small disruptions. They keep me honest. They remind me that control is mostly an illusion and that grace often arrives dressed as inconvenience. *On July 7, 2026, may we all trip lightly into whatever comes next.*