Natures beauty is the most reliable teacher and companion.
There is a profound, quiet wisdom in the words of Frank Lloyd Wright. To study nature is to look beyond the surface of a leaf or the rhythm of the tides and recognize that there is a blueprint for resilience and beauty all around us. When we talk about staying close to nature, we aren't just talking about a weekend hike or a trip to the park; we are talking about a way of being. Nature doesn't demand that we be perfect, and it doesn't judge our mistakes. It simply exists, constant and renewing, offering a steady heartbeat that we can sync our own to when the world feels far too loud.
In our modern, busy lives, it is so easy to become disconnected. We spend hours staring at glowing screens, navigating spreadsheets, and worrying about deadlines that feel life-altering in the moment. We lose that sense of grounding that comes from feeling the earth beneath our feet or smelling the air after a heavy rain. When we neglect this connection, we start to feel brittle, like a dry twig ready to snap under the slightest pressure. We forget that we are part of a much larger, much more stable ecosystem that knows how to handle change and seasonal shifts.
I remember a time when I felt particularly overwhelmed by the weight of my own thoughts. Everything felt chaotic, and no matter how much I tried to organize my life, I felt like I was drifting. One afternoon, I decided to just sit by a small, quiet pond near my home. I stopped trying to solve my problems and instead focused on watching the ripples move across the water and the way the dragonflies darted between the reeds. In that stillness, the chaos in my mind didn't disappear, but it certainly lost its power over me. The pond didn't need me to fix it; it just needed me to witness it. That moment of closeness reminded me that stability is always available if we just take a moment to look for it.
Nature is a constant companion that never fails us because its truths are unchanging. Even in the harshest winters, the seeds are waiting patiently underground, preparing for the spring. There is a lesson there for all of us: even when we feel dormant or stuck, we are still part of a cycle of growth. As you go about your day, I encourage you to find one small way to reconnect. Perhaps it is tending to a windowsill herb, noticing the shape of a cloud, or simply taking a deep breath of fresh air. Let nature remind you that you are exactly where you need to be.
