The American Camino pg. 149-151 (Hailey Hill)
As I was reading chapter three, I stumbled upon the entries of hikers and their words/poems. Poetry is the expression of our viewpoints and exposes the limits of language. The relationship between poetry and the environment runs deeper than an imagery or metaphor; it reflects a longstanding philosophical effort to understand how humans inhabit, interpret, and ethically relate to the natural world. Across cultures and historical periods, poets have served as intermediaries between the human mind and the nonhuman environment, translating ecological experience into language while revealing tensions between perception, value, and responsibility.
Ultimately, using poetry on the trail changes the way the hiker experiences walking. Every step feels like its own line break, and every breath becomes a small reminder that noticing the world is something we take part in, not something that just happens to us. Through a poetic lens, the landscape stops being just ground to cover and starts to feel like a living presence—something to meet, appreciate, and try to understand.
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