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Are you a seasoned trekker or are you an aspiring trekker who has stumbled upon our site while surfing the net for information? In either case, have you ever given thought as to why you choose to spend weeks at a time walking all day in the wilderness and sleeping in a tent at night?
The trail as metaphor is a broad and wonderful concept, for each person walks his or her own path through life, and each individual can be largely responsible for the direction that path may take. For many people walking trails in the Himalaya is an experience all the more powerful because its metaphorical teachings are couched neither in words nor within a system of organized thought. Pilgrimage has long been recommended as a means of salvation in both Tibetan and Hindu societies, not only for the merit that accrues in reaching a holy shrine or sacred phenomenon, but because of the character and inner strength induced by such travel. After some days of adjusting to the walking routine, you will begin to pay little or no attention
to your hesitant thoughts and will become better acquainted with the nuances of the endlessly changing land that you pass through. You may feel that each day is more intensely etched during these periods of time when your life is altered from its ordinary course. Few can fail to be touched by becoming, for a time, part of the Himalayan tapestry. Life, of course, is a matter of ups and downs like any trail. When one is going up, and the way
is steep and tiring, the idea that there will ever be an easier time of it is only a vague belief.
It is not real. The trail up and hard is real. The aching bones and burning lungs are real. Yet when one reaches the top and takes a shorter breath, the pain is soon forgotten and the misery of the climb has been left behind. Where I have been seems immaterial. We will pass many places and encounter many people during our journey, and when the trek is over we will leave them behind forever. How we treat them is not as important for them as for us. Our giving is like receiving. If we are truly caring about ourselves, we will see to it that we are richly rewarded by giving freely of ourselves.
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