From my personal experience, it is
not until one is truly lost that the value in sense of place is noticed. When
peaks are no longer distinguishable and fog covers the water, that is when nature
proves its dominance and reminds travelers that their presence is just another speck
of dust in the wind. Human nature’s minuteness in comparison to the vastness of
mother nature, from her wide mountain ranges to the endless seas that disappear
into her horizon, has proved that ever sense the beginning of time people have been at her
will.
Today technology has changed some
things, yes; however, there is a point that expensive GPS systems fail and maps
seem to be non-orientable. At this point journeyers have no advantage over
those who forged those same trails thousands of years ago. People realize the importance of awareness of
their surroundings for not only safety reasons, but for sanity as well. Civilization
wants control and understanding, as a whole giving themselves to something
bigger always has seemed to be an uncomfortable transition.
To attain comfort within the
natural world, to know place and to have an acceptance of place, travelers must
accept that they do not have ultimate control- upon this realization, a sense
of self and an appreciation of place can soon be achieved.
