What if the last moment you feared became the first morning of a different life?
For fifty years I chased what glittered-success, importance, the life other men made room for. Then, on an ordinary afternoon at seven thousand feet, my heart quit. And in the strange, timeless country I crossed into while the machines worked over my body, I found something I had spent my whole life running from.
Not fire. Not judgment. Love-plain and enormous-and four lessons I was sent back to carry home. One for each direction. One for each turning of the wheel.
From the red canyons of the Navajo Nation to the burned slopes beneath the San Francisco Peaks, my road unspooled like a sand painting: made with care, held for a while, and meant to be swept clean. Along the way, I met the people who set me straight-a wry woman at a trading post card table, an old man beside a fire, and a tired man doing hard work on a scorched mountain. From them, and from the four directions, I learned to build a joy that does not depend on what the world hands you. And I learned the hardest thing of all: the point of joy was never to keep it.
This is neither a manual nor a sermon. It is one man's story, told plainly and offered the way you'd hand a stranger a cup of coffee on a cold morning-because it is all I have and because the morning is cold.
Step into the light. Walk the path of beauty. And let the lessons find you the way they found me-when you finally grow still enough to hear them.