You Were Born To Move And Explore

By

Move. You were born to move. From the very second you entered this earth you were born to move. Before you could talk, you cried; before you could walk, you crawled.

Wild and curious, you grew and explored the world around you.

First was your home and your school, then it was your street and your neighbourhood; then your city and its fields. As the weeks went by, your world and horizons opened up and everything became bigger as you grew into the universe around you. You dreamt, you learnt, you explored, you wandered – and you moved. Because that was the most important thing; that was what was natural – to move and to grow. But what happens? What happens as you get older?

Your natural curious instinct to move and explore is stifled out of you.

You become an adult and are asked to decide on things that ultimately make you static; you’re asked to have a job in a singular building in a singular city in which to spend your adult life saving to buy a singular static house that ultimately compounds and cements one’s lack of movement. Your range of movement that once soared week-in, week-out as you grew into your world becomes reduced to the simple repetitive commute to work, the few square metres in the building of the work space and the same old journey to the supermarket and pub at the weekend.

Too tired after work, you park yourself down on the sofa to watch a box in front of you every night. Your mental and spiritual world also becomes ever-harder to expand and explore; with time constraints and a grinding exhausting routine, there is no time to read that book, to learn that language or to play that instrument. You are too tired and too busy. So you no longer explore; you no longer wander; and you no longer move.

But it’s not all your natural state of being; a lack of movement in intrinsic to a lack of life after all – no movement consequently suggests no life. If one lets their physical and mental movement decline exponentially then they are left living less and less each day as they descend into old age. And so you have to fight. To live to your fullest and make the most of now, you have to move. Whoever you are, in whatever capacity, in whatever format.

Go running before or after work; travel to a new place on the weekend; save up all your money to go on an adventure – an exploration, a journey, a voyage. If you’re young and have no responsibilities to attain to, then travel and live on the other side of the world, in a new culture, a new landscape; if you’re old and encumbered with responsibilities then embrace them – take your kids to new places, try new things in your spare time, seek to learn something new and break old bad habits.

Exercise. Exercise your body, your rights of freedom, your right to explore, grow and be happy.

The ability to run, to cycle, to jump or to climb is due to the ownership of the greatest device one can ever own. Your body is the most valuable piece of equipment you will ever have the privilege to operate – a privilege that is fully denied to many others; so make the most of your mobility and feel the power of your existence as you tread the earth’s vibrant soil and run through space and time – make the most of your mobility and move.

And keep moving. Don’t let your movement decrease; ever. Stay hungry, stay wild.

Your movement is the exercise of your life, your process of being conscious, alive and a part of this universe; it’s what represents and quantifies your existence in this moment right here – right now. Never let your life slow down to the point where you are sitting still and killing time; not while you have the ability to run, fly and soar into the space around you. J

Just remember that the day all your movement decreases completely and you cease to move and look forward, mentally and physically, will ultimately be the last day of your life. Your movement is your life; so get up and move. Open your horizons; plan your adventures; open your mind; keep moving, keep growing and Stay Alive. Always. Move.