Do It Yourself Gardening and Landscape Design

How have mountains affected your life?

Are they are merely a boundary, a symbol of challenges, something you climb to be closer to heaven or the heavens, a place to test yourself, a backdrop as a curtain to a stage? Are they far away or ever present in your life? Do they permeate your onsciousness or are they merely a feature of the landscape that is below awareness? Are dreams better when they include mountains?

Well that is an interesting, if not somewhat esoteric question. Mountains to me have, as our patriotic song “O Beautiful” testifies to, something majestic about them. There is something entirely mythical about mountainous areas that give them a divine aurora. I suppose that is why the ancient Greeks (Mount Olympus), Hindus (Himalayas), and our own Judeo-Christian tradition (Mt. Ararat and Sinai) treat mountains with such reverence.

I personally, having lived in flat regions for most of my life, find mountainous terrain otherworldly. To me mountains represent not only places for shelter, refuge, and something beautiful, they also symbolize obstacles that man can use as a crucible to test his courage and fortitude. This is especially true for someone like me, who is acrophobic. I hope that if I ever have the opportunity to move, I will move to a mountainous region. If a heaven does exist, I hope mountains are there.

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6 Responses to “How have mountains affected your life?”

  1. CuriousC says:

    They are quite sublime (in the Romantic sense). Makes you wonder about the natural beauties of the world. I’m always in complete awe when I see them. I LOVE mountains :)
    References :

  2. Shayna says:

    no mountains in my area only hills with thick forest
    References :

  3. Stuka says:

    Only the one I fell off of as a boy. It didn’t kill me ,so it made me stronger.
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  4. Mr Spock says:

    Many fall to the wayside, indulging in self-pity, recklessness,
    and self-destruction.
    The Spiritul Warrior sees the mountain as an opportunity to rise to greater heights as a human and spiritual being!
    References :
    Mr Spock
    I won’t list all my AKAs.

  5. OmegaWoman says:

    I like mountains best when they’re really volcanoes. Though if I have a choice of mountains vs. ocean I’ll pick mountains everytime. They’re something to climb up on to be safe, to look down, to see more clearly, and perhaps most importantly, to gain perspective. I’ve been above the clouds on a mountain. I’ve gotten altitude sickness too. You just can’t take too much with you when you’re on a mountain. Maybe that’s what helps clear your head? Or maybe I just need some of those oxygen tanks they were selling back at that last station?
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  6. Lawrence Louis says:

    Well that is an interesting, if not somewhat esoteric question. Mountains to me have, as our patriotic song “O Beautiful” testifies to, something majestic about them. There is something entirely mythical about mountainous areas that give them a divine aurora. I suppose that is why the ancient Greeks (Mount Olympus), Hindus (Himalayas), and our own Judeo-Christian tradition (Mt. Ararat and Sinai) treat mountains with such reverence.

    I personally, having lived in flat regions for most of my life, find mountainous terrain otherworldly. To me mountains represent not only places for shelter, refuge, and something beautiful, they also symbolize obstacles that man can use as a crucible to test his courage and fortitude. This is especially true for someone like me, who is acrophobic. I hope that if I ever have the opportunity to move, I will move to a mountainous region. If a heaven does exist, I hope mountains are there.
    References :

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