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Today I continued through the forest, unaware that I wasn’t breathing right. And so I stopped at a large, thick tree, and leaned up against the wet, moss-covered trunk thirsty for a glass of awareness. I knelt and pressed my face into the mulch and dirt so I could breath in the earth, but all I smelled was dust. Today, the navy-blue forest felt colder but I felt warmer. I saw a crow, perched high up on a branch, and I called out to him. And as he flew down to meet me, I opened my eyes. I had tripped on a wire made of disturbing disheartening, dismaying feelings. But I was too tired, too vacant, to cry. I stood up, brushed off my jeans, and continued onward.
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Aug 28, 2010
Aug 28, 2010 at 9:03 PM UTC
August 28, 2010
Today I continued through the forest, unaware that I wasn’t breathing right. And so I stopped at a large, thick tree, and leaned up against the wet, moss-covered trunk thirsty for a glass of awareness. I knelt and pressed my face into the mulch and dirt so I could breath in the earth, but all I smelled was dust. Today, the navy-blue forest felt colder but I felt warmer. I saw a crow, perched high up on a branch, and I called out to him. And as he flew down to meet me, I opened my eyes. I had tripped on a wire made of disturbing disheartening, dismaying feelings. But I was too tired, too vacant, to cry. I stood up, brushed off my jeans, and continued onward.
A story emerges. Read August 27 to understand how I got into the navy-blue forest.
preston-c-palmer-1
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Aug 28, 2010
Aug 28, 2010 at 9:03 PM UTC
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