There are old ways that we have forgotten, sacred to our ancestors generations ago. Far before men named Jesus Christ Muhammad and Confucius, our ancestors knew the ways to live as enduring and resilient as the seasons. Songs and rites, gods as ancient as the deep green forest, and stories of the rise and fall of great men: Chieftains, farmers, warriors, musicians whose songs echoed over young world.
The world was harsh then, as cold as the towering bedrock of the mountains. We gave thanks for what we had, both to the gods and to ourselves. The choice was to live strong, work hard or die like a wounded animal. The world was fair in the days of old, our cares cleansed through sweat and blood, and in the crushing weight of the labor of survival we found peace.
Today, our peace is lost. We have nations, such foreign things, a group of people enslaved by custom. The green forest has become the fireplace of a world too gray, the unforgiving mountains mere pebbles beneath our trembling, dying feet. Though our lives are calm our minds are shattered, the breezes of indifference blowing away the forgotten ways of old.