Tag Archives: borders

Two names, one river.

Musings from a nine day, 65 mile white-water canoeing trip on the Rio Grande

What are boundaries?  How do you define borders, in the physical sense?  What does it mean to be on a river, floating between what we know as one and another?  A river that divides two countries on paper, but in this vast desert only divides a piece of land?  A river that has two names?  The Rio Grande, or the Rio Bravo?  I do not see any disparity here.  I do not see black or white.  Only one reality is found out here.  My eyes are fixed; transfixed by a calm, blue river, weaving a path through an arid landscape, reflecting the golden hues of towering, complementary canyons on either side.

Nature always has a way of putting humanity in perspective.  These rocks, these cliffs, and this mighty river were all here long before our evolutionary ancestors roamed the earth.  The river has existed for millions of years.  The rocks were here then – they have slightly changed – but they are still here today.  The rocks remind me of what truly “matters” and what we often overlook as we go about our daily life.  There are larger forces at play here, and these cliffs, nature’s rising monuments, will remain long after we all perish.

It’s dawn and the sun is barely peeking over the canyons in the distance.  I look down the tranquil river and I’m stunned by a brilliant reflection.  The ridges are carved right as they are left.  The sound is the same on the north bank as it is on the south bank.  I see only one blue sky above me, and only one sun warming me up.  Sticks, rocks, and carcasses find their way from one side of the bank to the other, taking thousands of years of river power or calmly floating in a days time.

So tell me, what do borders mean when you are surrounded by this great, harmonizing energy?  Why the disparity, when really all is one and one is all in the end?  The canvas of nature will always trump whatever painting we coat it with.

March 2009 (updated January 2011)

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