
"The Peace of Wild Things" is a poem by Wendell Berry, which I recommend highly, but which is occasioned by wild things' absence of anticipation and remembrance. The wild things that are hunted have less peace, I would think, than the wild things that do the hunting, but then, everything is hunted by something, and the more conscious anything is of that, the less peace it has as a regular state of being, wild or not. Which makes peace a fleeting thing, coming and going at a moment's notice, incapable of hanging around like poverty forever. If peace had the staying power of poverty, it would take the anguish out of being poor. Or hunted. But no. Here it comes, there it goes. Peace like the wind blows through our lives as an irregular reminder of what we don't have, or have too much of, regretting and dreading through our days, with an occasional respite of peace like that of the lake above oblivious to the moss growing beneath its surface and the annual leaf fall filling it from above until there is no room for water to rest on its way to the sea, which is coming, hunting for it, even as we speak, challenging us to make our peace with that if we can. Awakening us to the reality of peace being more of a state of mind than a state of being, and asking us to be okay with things as the are even as they are changing, transforming, coming, going, which is the way of all things like the rhythms of the tides and the moon in its orbit, and our way through our life, whispering relentlessly, "Let it be because it is, and what would you do about it anyway that has a chance at permanence or even longevity? So, let come what's coming and let go what's going, and make the best of what's what here and now." Making our peace with that is all the peace we will ever have, and all we need to find what we need to do what needs to be done here and now some more again every day.
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What a truth!
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Truth at its grounding foundation is hilarious .
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I love me some existentialism!
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