once upon a dream

once upon a dream

a trail in teton national park takes off from a nondescript, dirt parking lot that one reaches only after traveling a mile or so of rutted, gravelly earth with occasional potholes the size of, say, a watering trough. this puts few travelers off: what lies ahead is well worth the dust, bumps, caution, and discomfort.

the lupine meadows trailhead offers options, and in the past, I have taken two of those: one to garnett canyon and onward to lower saddle, upper saddle, and then a climb up the grand teton; and the other, a less dramatic hike but a surreal ending at amphitheater lake.

a few weeks back I awakened in the early dark, packed my daypack, and drove into the park so that I could begin my hike to the lake by 5:30. headlamp lit, hat and layers and gloves on, I headed up the trail.

singing.

I wanted any and all bears in the vicinity to know I was coming, and to know not to mess with me.

I sang the song I’d awakened with, a song I’d not thought of for years but that had somehow played in my nocturnal adventures, a song from Cinderella whose main lyric is

I know you, I walked with you once upon a dream.

I made up the rest of the words, because that was the only line I could recall.

and I sang, and sang, until the sky began to lighten and I eventually broke free of the cloud in which I’d been walking. below me spread the top of the cloud which nestled itself in the jackson valley, and from my new position I could now see mountain tops, clouds, and the sun which was just beginning to inch its way into the visible sky. I grew a bit warmer, and then colder as I neared the top of the trail where snow lay on the ground.

surprise lake comes first, a delightful, unexpected gift on your left, and then within another quarter mile you happen upon ampitheater lake, larger and more dramatic, as it reigns from the base of granite and gneiss mountains that reach far into the sky.

it was silent.

not another human was anywhere near.

the lake itself was glass, mirror-like, reflecting perfectly the walls of stone that shot upward, snow dusted, still.

I get to do this, I thought. my life contains moment after moment, experiences one after another, that, when I slow down to understand and let them in, are all reflections of this dream I live. a dream in which someone is always there, walking alongside me, whether visible or not.

I know you, I walked with you once upon a dream.

5 illuminative books about how to be

5 illuminative books about how to be

like millions of other humans, I am curious about how to be in this world. how to balance my wants/needs/desires with those of the greater community, how to find my own “happy place,” how to accept things I don’t really wish to accept.  over the years, I’ve read many books written by masters, by students, by yogis and wise ones and commonplace folk. in each I found something, but in those listed below, enough welled up to place the book on this list.

 

the four agreements, don miguel ruiz.  everyone should read this book, and work to live by these agreements. everyone. I work, daily, toward better living them.

the alchemist, paulo coelho. I have read this at least a half dozen times, and each experience is as heartful as the first. be true to yourself.

the tao of pooh, benjamin huff. that is one wise bear, with a lovely sense of humor.

true love: a practice for awakening the heart, thich nhat hanh. everything this vietnamese zen buddhist writes is geared toward inner–and thus outer–peace.

traveling light: releasing the burdens you were never meant to bear, max lucado. lucado is a master teacher, and reading him helps me refine and re-find me.

I’d love to know what’s on your list ~ the only way we expand ourselves is through experience with other.