

I cannot walk blindly. I have to take that first step, and that in itself is often where my hardest conflict lies. After that first step taken, I consider the next, and I proceed, stopping now and then to reconsider. Caution? Fear? Practicality? Quite honestly, rocky paths are a challenge for me. First, because of my very real fear of heights.
It has increased as I have aged, yet I live by the credo that I will NOT be one of those women afraid to do anything difficult. There is so much in life to fear, and if I allow fear to rule my life, I will sit in a corner afraid to leave the house. That is not going to happen to me. I will keep going and moving, experiencing winding mountain roads or rocky hills, despite nauseating fear.

The issue for me is often the path itself; it climbs, descends, twists, turns into unknown places. Ultimately the top comes into view, but it is that unknown area in-between that can be cause for consideration. Sometimes there are roots I can use as stepping stones and one step becomes another effortlessly. Sometimes I have to look up to keep going, sometimes down at my feet. Now and then I have found myself taking a step or two back in order to find firmer footing. I don't just run blindly on and up; I do have to stop and consider my options now and then. So my self-evaluation, self-work, self-talk? All that has been about why I feel as I do and what to do about it; I have to know where I turned in order not to walk exactly that path again. I don't want to slide backward down the slope I just worked so hard to climb.

They were tight flights, both, and there was no room to stretch. So, my very short legs, not really needing too much room anyway, rebelled at the chilled air, the inactivity and the limited space causing my right hamstring to tighten.
It took me a week or so to limber it back up, and then I tripped at work, and it weakened further. A week or so after that, I was angry at the constant pain and I was trying to walk it off, to exercise it back to healthy, and it tore. I heard it rip and pop as it gave out and I went down. It was scary. I was on crutches for several weeks, and the effort of walking was excruciating. It took about 6 months to heal well, and in that time I sat. I isolated myself from my friends, from a lot of activity or noise. Which was in a way good; it set me farther along my metaphysical road; I read more about alternative, natural health and wellness. I learned methods to help both my mind and my body, and it made me happy, and both my mind and body began to feel really good. This summer's adventure to the northeast coast (upstate New York, the Adirondacks, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine) further strengthened my legs, and I feel physically better than I have in a few years. But over the course of the year, in the process of silence and healing I isolated myself from my friends. Time marches on; what is the phrase; time waits for no man? It hasn't affected the depth of my friendships, but it has made me realize how much I am alone; everyone has a life to lead, and my day to day life is very quiet because mostly everyone is busy with their own life. When I needed the alone, healing time, I had it, and I cherished it. But I find my heart in a different place this summer, and I am not quite sure where that is. Loneliness is part of it. The rest is what I am working on figuring out.

I have strayed so far from my original thoughts. I found myself thinking just now - now what was my original question or thought? It makes me smile at myself. Writing does that to me. It is my catharsis. My life rope. It makes my mind go in the direction it needs to go sometimes in order to come across answers that I did not know I needed. I was giving myself permission to look back across the way I came; to look and evaluate my thoughts and feelings about where I turned to cause the feelings to be stirring inside of me as they are. I sometimes feel conflicted because I do not want to dwell on what cannot be changed. I believe I do learn from where I have been. Self reflection and self evaluation help me determine the "whys" of my life. I wonder if this is true mindful thinking?

Love it!
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