The American Camino Chapter 5 (Hailey Hill)

    While reading chapter five, I began to see parts of my own identity within the concepts of the chapter. Ultimately, calling wilderness sacred is another way of saying it shapes us. It reminds us of our smallness and our belonging, our vulnerability and our capacity for awe. In a world where the environment is often framed in terms of crisis and loss, wilderness as a sacred space offers a different kind of truth: that renewal, meaning, and connection are still possible, waiting in the places where the human and the more-than-human meet.

    In today’s conversations about environmental philosophy, an Indigenous perspective pushes back against the idea that nature is only valuable if it can be used or measured. It reminds us that our sense of meaning, identity, and even survival is tied to the places we come from and depend on. And in a time when environmental crises feel more urgent than ever, the belief that land is sacred—and that we share responsibility for caring for it—acts both as a caution and a call to do better.

    

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Kip Redick Example of a Student's Choosing

Kip Redick Example of an Outside Reading Post

Kip Redick Student's Free Choice Example