A Startling Realization


       
        Every time I enter the woods, I am reminded of what a wild and solemn place it is. The trees creak if any wind blows and all one hears is a raging silence. I have always found the immense solitude calming; a comforting peace pervades the places that no humans wander.
         Many times when I was younger and needed a friend to confide in, all I could find was the forest. As tears began to tumble in little ripples down my face, I would dash into the quiet expanse—knowing that there I could be alone; I knew that once I reached it, the woods would envelope me all around with its arms of safety. The adventuresome air would whisk me away from the dangers of everyday life and never once ask about my sorrow; it would not be anxious about me or wonder what gave me such despair. The woods merely sat, wrapping a shell of safety about me.
It was on such a day—I could not say now what had caused me such grief—that I hid myself amidst a colossal wall of rocks and sobbed. I do not know how long I sat, hidden in the countryside. (Time seems to slow when one is alone with God and His immense creation.) All I remember is the thoughts and observances that came upon me as I poured out my sadness to the welcoming woods.
After some time of feeling myself an exceptionally miserable being, I rose and cast my eyes to the world about me. I had been sitting on a flat slab of sandstone, which was surrounded by stones and boulders of various sizes; each rock was layered with moss and fallen leaves, and gave me the distinct feeling of its freedom from man. Throughout the field of rocks wound a pathway, which carved deeper into the woods. From the edge of my post, I could see the ground gradually falling away and becoming a small cliff. Looking down I noticed many trees and sharp descents before the wall leveled out and ran into a small, undulating creek. I stood and walked along the small pathway that wove along the side of the hill. Birds sang in the trees, the undergrowth and bushes rustled, and the autumn breeze tugged playfully at my hair. The air was filled with a tingling sensation, as if even the skies were thrilled with its own immensity.
As I watched nature’s habit taking place around me, I smiled, forgetting my sorrow. I found myself thinking that though I am just a small and insignificant human to the remote woodlands, the creator of the great solitude thought me useful and needed. The thought is both startling and comforting: I—in spite of my failures and ridiculousness—am important to the creator of all things; I am valuable to God.