Beware the way your forebears came, dragging goods and cattle, horses and wagons, whimpering children, not nearly enough food or water to cross the unforgiving mountain passes. Destination unknown.
They mistook the rugged, rocky, drought- ridden road for the path to the promised land. What they found instead was a land full of promise, but beckoning only to the prominent few, who could survive without loss of pride or prowess or precious blood.
But that is not your way. You are destined for much finer things, unseen, celestial things that repair and reset your spiritual compass, and unfurl the map of successive crossroads you must face -- the terror of angels, the awe of the miraculous and the angst of self-overcoming.
Your home is not of earth or water, but of the sky, its heliocentric emptiness broadcasting a better way to wander through the inevitable suffering of humankind. A delicate, mindful way.
No, your home is of the sky and of its stars in all their ancient glory. Together they project a haven of words to protect you from the elements and from ambush by the rash mountain climbers before you.
Theirs is not your way, no. Yours remains the way of Li Po, the vulnerable, venerated way, the way of the poets.