he said 'you're already there' and it wasn't about the miles, it was about the constant measuring, the always trying to GET somewhere instead of noticing that i'm already, here, now, breathing, moving, enough. but enough isn't static, is it? it's not a destination either, it's that feeling of being exactly where your feet are planted, even when those feet are tired and blistered and aching. it's the acceptance that the 'there' is always changing, always becoming, and the only way to truly arrive is to stop chasing and start feeling the ground beneath you. and isn't that the whole damn thing?