For the past several weeks we have been making course corrections.
We’ve stood watch at the helm, studied the charts, adjusted our headings, and accepted that sometimes the shortest distance between where we are and where we want to be is not a straight line.
Course corrections require effort.
They require honesty.
They require the humility to admit that the old heading is no longer taking us where we intended to go.
But eventually the corrections are made.
The harbor is reached.
The anchor is down.
And if we are wise, we allow ourselves a little liberty.
That is where this week’s voyage begins.
Not at sea.
Not in the storm.
Not at the chart table.
On the beach.
Now before anyone accuses me of running off to spend the week in a hammock with a tropical drink in hand, understand that this beach is as much a state of mind as it is a place.
It is our philosophical beach.
The place we visit when we stop asking, “What should I be doing next?” and start asking, “What does it mean to simply be here?”
Modern life has trained us to become very accomplished human doings.
We build careers.
We raise families.
We solve problems.
We answer emails.
We pay bills.
We maintain boats, homes, businesses, and responsibilities.
These things matter.
They are part of a life well-lived.
But somewhere along the way many of us quietly begin to believe that our worth is tied to our productivity.
That if we stop moving, we stop mattering.
The beach offers a gentle correction to that idea.
The tide comes and goes whether we hurry or not.
The pelicans work the shoreline without anxiety.
The sun rises on schedule without consulting our calendars.
The waves arrive one at a time and ask nothing of us except that we notice them.
Perhaps there is wisdom in that.
Over the coming week we’ll spend some time walking this philosophical shoreline together.
We’ll talk about presence.
About rest.
About gratitude.
About the difference between activity and purpose.
About why some of the most important moments in life produce nothing at all except memories worth keeping.
We’ll consider what footprints mean when the tide eventually washes them away.
We’ll think about horizons that can guide us even though we never actually reach them.
And we’ll spend some time exploring the possibility that being fully present in a moment may itself be a worthy accomplishment.
The sea has taught us many lessons over the years.
This week, perhaps the beach gets a turn.
So grab a cup of coffee.
Kick off your shoes.
Pull up a chair in the sand.
Welcome to our philosophical beach.
I think there’s something worth learning here.