Back then I fancied myself a little like Walt Whitman. I
wrote poems full of wandering thoughts and cosmic questions. I was fascinated
by existence itself. Even then, long before I had language for it, I suspected
the world was more alive than most people believed.
One poem in particular stayed with me all these years,
though the paper itself disappeared somewhere along the road of life. Moves,
boxes, old notebooks, decades passing like leaves in autumn wind. The original
vanished, but the feeling never did.
In the poem I walked through a door one day.
There was nothing dramatic about the door. No thunder. No
angels. No psychedelic colors. Just a doorway, almost ordinary. Yet on the
other side was a different kind of world.
The trees were conscious there.
Not conscious in the cartoon sense where they spoke English
or walked about like actors in a costume. It was deeper and stranger than that.
They were aware. Alive. Present. Watching. Their silence carried intelligence.
Their movements in the wind felt like communication.
And what struck me most was not merely that the trees were
conscious.
It was that they wondered whether humans were conscious.
They observed us the way we observe animals. They watched
human beings moving about, making strange sounds, rushing endlessly from place
to place, and they questioned whether we possessed true awareness at all. To
them humanity seemed noisy, distracted, disconnected from reality.
I remember in the poem that realization terrified me.
Everything I thought I understood about existence suddenly
inverted itself. Humanity was no longer the center of awareness. We were not
the measure of all things. We were simply one form moving among many forms
within a living universe.
Panic overtook me.
I turned quickly to go back through the door.
But the door was gone.
That was the true horror of the poem. Not the conscious
trees. Not the strange world. It was the realization that once seen, some
things cannot be unseen. Once consciousness expands beyond a certain threshold,
you cannot fully return to the old simplicity.
I wandered for a long time in that world.
Loneliness became part of the landscape. I felt separated
not merely from people, but from the assumptions that held ordinary reality
together. Others around me seemed comfortable living in a mechanical universe
while I increasingly sensed depth everywhere. Presence everywhere. Mystery
everywhere.
At times I questioned my own sanity.
At times I wished I could return to the smaller world where
everything was solid, explainable, and emotionally safe.
But there was no door anymore.
Only wandering.
Yet over time, in the poem, I occasionally met others.
A few scattered souls who also seemed displaced. Wanderers.
Mystics. Poets. Seekers. People who sensed that consciousness might run far
deeper than human thought alone. We recognized one another almost
instinctively, like travelers stranded in the same strange country.
Those meetings became sacred to me.
Not because we had all the answers, but because they
lessened the loneliness.
Years passed in the poem, though time there did not feel
normal. Gradually fear gave way to adjustment. Adjustment gave way to
acceptance. And acceptance slowly became peace.
I began to understand that perhaps the tragedy was not that
I had lost the old world.
Perhaps the tragedy would have been never discovering the
larger one.
Today, looking back nearly half a century later, I realize
that old forgotten poem was probably about far more than trees. It was about
awakening itself. About crossing invisible thresholds in consciousness. About
losing certainty and gaining mystery. About the painful and beautiful
realization that reality may be infinitely more alive than we were taught.
In many ways I never stopped walking through that vanished
doorway.
My spiritual journey, my wrestling with Christianity, my
fascination with consciousness, mysticism, the cosmic Christ, Hermetic thought,
and the living interconnectedness of all things—it may all trace back to that
inner landscape I glimpsed as a young man.
And strangely enough, I no longer feel panic about the
missing door.
I have made peace with the forest.






