And luckily there are people around that can offer an outside perspective in what my foot is, and drawing that together with what I am able to observe and surmise on my own, I am able to come to a satisfactory conclusion and develop a solid comfortable base to make my decision from. Looking at the paths before me, and discussing them with wise people helps me make the best decision in which direction to move my foot. Taking the time to stand and wait and communicate before I make such a decision, I am able to weigh and measure and accept and prepare and clear myself for the task. I then confidently lift and move my foot forward, one small step for man kind and one giant decision for tld.
So a decision has been made, now a path needs to be chosen. I have spoken with the tour guides in the area, and am now standing talking to my hiking partner. After careful planning and communication, we move our feet forward together. Now we know our route, and we have begun our journey, we help fellow hikers along the way, but rely solely upon each other to share the journey, to get to the end together, as that is part of the path that was originally chosen, and part of the plan. We know what our feet are and where we stand, we are fit to move, and move we shall. So this is the longest hike you could ever be on, and in the big plan for the full tour, we must make many stops and overcome a variety of terrain and obstacles. We have everything within our resourceful wit to help us along the journey, and will acquire more supplies along the way to replenish our stocks. We will fall down, get back up, and encounter whatever lies in our sight on the paths before us, a mystery in experience always just up ahead. Our hike will help people, our foot steps left to guide people in the future. And once we have covered the whole tour, and woven our way through the weather, we can go home in the end. We can sit and remember, relax and rest. We can pass on the pieces of ourselves that we left on the paths, so that the next sets of hikers have wise advisers, and they may successfully complete their hike, their journeys through life, well prepared and ready. That their journey may be better than ours, or at least the best it can be for them, and they are able to come home in the end, pass on the pieces of themselves that were left on the paths.
And so, we will be able to close our eyes, and they will too. And we will meet again on the next journey, maybe not a hike, maybe something new. The paths will still be there, and our pieces part of them, for all hikers to observe as they pass by in their own fashion and experience, enjoy and carry on leaving a piece of themselves behind. The pieces are there to see for any that choose to look, and for those whose eyes happen to fall upon them.
We just passed a fork in the path that's all, we saw what we saw and experienced what we experienced. We now carry a piece of that part of the path with us, as we have left our own behind. On the move again, the break is over, the storm has cleared and we ca see the path before us. So this is a piece of the path that I have left for you, and it is now your own experience to carry away. When you get to the end, you may pass this piece on, or it may just help you along the way.