Embracing a nature and outdoor lifestyle can have a profound impact on both our well-being and the health of the planet. By spending time in nature, we can cultivate a deeper appreciation for the world around us and develop a stronger connection to the land and its inhabitants.
This is the “-1” in your keyword. Not zero, but negative one. Before one. Before the count even begins. A state so raw it feels like the day before the first day of creation. Holy Nature - Enature - On The Desert Island -1...
Holy Nature includes the fang. It includes the rot. It includes the parasitic worm and the bone-dry drought. On this island, I have learned to say "Amen" to the mosquito as well as the sunset. This is the hardest lesson: The sacred is not comfortable. Embracing a nature and outdoor lifestyle can have
of the human form in harmony with the environment rather than high-stakes survival drama. Historical Context: Thou shalt not hoard
Holy Nature - Enature - On The Desert Island - 1 The concept of Holy Nature often evokes images of lush forests or crystal-clear springs, but the true test of Enature—the intrinsic, raw power of the natural world—is found in the isolation of a desert island. In this first installment of our series, we explore the spiritual and physical survival required when humanity is stripped of modern convenience and placed back into the hands of the earth. The Philosophy of Enature
When you are stranded on a desert island, survival becomes a form of worship. Every drop of fresh water found in a hollowed stone is a miracle. Every coconut harvested is a gift. This is the "Holy" aspect of nature—the realization that life is fragile and entirely dependent on the environment’s grace.