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LuckyCharms

(22,447 posts)
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 08:50 AM Yesterday

A quote attributed to both Muhammad Ali and "unknown" that is profound in its simplicity.

"Looking at life from a different perspective makes you realize that it's not the deer that is crossing the road. Rather it's the road that is crossing the forest.”

This will probably mean different things to different people, but I think this is amazingly compelling and open to multi-faceted interpretations.

Make of it what you will.

You all have a peaceful day.

27 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A quote attributed to both Muhammad Ali and "unknown" that is profound in its simplicity. (Original Post) LuckyCharms Yesterday OP
I love it. perfessor Yesterday #1
Sometimes it's not what you see, but what you don't. cachukis Yesterday #2
That's a great quote. StarryNite Yesterday #3
Perspective...is a wonderful thing... MiHale Yesterday #4
Love it.... Escape Yesterday #5
EXACTLY!!! niyad Yesterday #6
We've had visits from all three... GiqueCee Yesterday #17
I've lost lots of bird feeders and a drain spout erronis Yesterday #21
That reminds me that they will soon be out of hibernation here. niyad Yesterday #22
Thank you, LC. Reminds me of an old joke about Holmes and Watson. niyad Yesterday #7
Perfect! LuckyCharms Yesterday #8
What a wonderful quote and way of viewing so much in this world. Bumbles Yesterday #9
When I lived out in the desert, I planted my vegetable garden with niyad Yesterday #10
And the ticks and mosquitos were here first also! erronis Yesterday #19
So very true. niyad Yesterday #24
I'd also like to share this one EverHopeful Yesterday #11
This is good! Perspective makes all the difference. LuckyCharms Yesterday #12
I think I read a similar idea in Siddhartha Marthe48 Yesterday #13
This is lovely, Marthe. LuckyCharms Yesterday #15
Nice! It reminds me of a quote I heard many years ago. CaptainTruth Yesterday #14
Or, "a weed is simply a plant whose value has not yet been acknowledged." niyad Yesterday #16
Or a weed is a plant growing in the wrong place Marthe48 Yesterday #18
I like all of these definitions. calimary Yesterday #25
Love this! Wild blueberry Yesterday #20
Beautiful, profound quote Martin Eden Yesterday #23
K&R Blue Owl 21 hrs ago #26
True jfz9580m 11 hrs ago #27

Escape

(439 posts)
5. Love it....
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 09:37 AM
Yesterday

I guess I don't really have bears, coyotes and bobcats on my land. I built my house on theirs.

GiqueCee

(3,888 posts)
17. We've had visits from all three...
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:39 AM
Yesterday

... but especially the bears. When they come out of hibernation, they make for the bird feeders; they be HUNGRY! Had a 1-inch steel pole bedded in concrete snapped off at the base by a black bear that was feeling a bit peckish. The steel feeder itself was designed to keep blue jays out of it. Couldn't stand up to a hungry bear, though; he tore it to pieces.
Encounters around here are getting more numerous because of human encroachment on their turf. Only had one bad outcome that I know of... so far.

erronis

(23,511 posts)
21. I've lost lots of bird feeders and a drain spout
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 01:01 PM
Yesterday

Bird feeders on decks behind a fence? No problem for a hungry bear!

The drain spout was interesting. Apparently the asphalt tiles on the roof have some salt content and the bears like to lick the water coming out - even going so far as to rip off the bottom section of the pipe. (This according to a wise Vermont contractor.)

niyad

(131,608 posts)
22. That reminds me that they will soon be out of hibernation here.
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 01:06 PM
Yesterday

Notices will be up everywhere. Locals, at least, know enough to avoid them if possible. Several years ago we had a bear that spent quite some days wandering a neighborhood a bit far from where they usually den. The locals would react with, 'hey, joe, grab your camera, the bear is headed your way." Cameras out, people would take pics from inside, or their porches. No serious interactions. But then, we are very used to the wildlife here, and try not to be stupid. Some of the visitors, on the other hand. . .

niyad

(131,608 posts)
7. Thank you, LC. Reminds me of an old joke about Holmes and Watson.
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 09:46 AM
Yesterday

They are camping, and they have retired for the night. Holmes tells Watson to look up and tell him what he sees. Watson looks up at the night sky, talks about the stars, very philosophical and profound. Holmes sighs, and says, "Someone has stolen our tent."

Bumbles

(433 posts)
9. What a wonderful quote and way of viewing so much in this world.
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 09:59 AM
Yesterday

I often think when we have a surge of mice or deer eating from my garden, we planted our house in the middle of their land. We, not they, are the intruders.

niyad

(131,608 posts)
10. When I lived out in the desert, I planted my vegetable garden with
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:12 AM
Yesterday

the understanding that the primary inhabitants would regard it as their convenient new salad bar. Amazingly, that was not the case, I only had one, who adored the lemon cucumbers and ignored everything else. The jackrabbbits did me the favour of keeping my grass eaten to a nice, tidy height, ignoring my flowers. And I was visited by coyotes and other denizens of the desert. It was wonderful, a real gift for this interloper.

erronis

(23,511 posts)
19. And the ticks and mosquitos were here first also!
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:43 AM
Yesterday

The real invasive species is humankind.

EverHopeful

(682 posts)
11. I'd also like to share this one
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:14 AM
Yesterday

We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.

Granted, it's more likely the thorns developed to protect the roses and our roads weren't created to protect the deer but still enjoy the change of perspective.

Marthe48

(23,012 posts)
13. I think I read a similar idea in Siddhartha
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:21 AM
Yesterday

by Hermann Hesse. I was too young to embrace the idea, even if it stuck with me. But then, a few years ago, I wanted to take a picture. It had rained, the light had that moist, softly bright quality after a summer shower. There was a puddle beside the street and several birds were bathing. I didn't have a camera, and figured I could wait. As I continued up the street to home, I thought of the movement of the planet, then of our solar system, then the universe and realized that that moment had been unique--its place in the day, its place in the universe. From that moment of what, existential realization?, I have tried to live in a certain moments, because each moment really is unique and will never repeat.

Thanks for the reminder, Lucky. Hope all is well.





CaptainTruth

(8,162 posts)
14. Nice! It reminds me of a quote I heard many years ago.
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:25 AM
Yesterday

That is:

The difference between a flower & a weed is a judgment.

Marthe48

(23,012 posts)
18. Or a weed is a plant growing in the wrong place
Thu Mar 5, 2026, 10:40 AM
Yesterday

At my house, I decided to let nature win

jfz9580m

(16,834 posts)
27. True
Fri Mar 6, 2026, 08:42 AM
11 hrs ago

The roadless rule was awesome. Environmentalists are mostly the only people I really trust as a they give a shit about something other than: me, me, me..

Awesome piece by Christopher Ketcham:
https://www.counterpunch.org/2025/09/19/the-roading-of-the-last-wild-places/

In June, the Trump administration announced that it intended to rescind the roadless rule, and this month it instituted an accelerated three-week public comment period, set to end on Sept. 19. What had taken two years to put together would now be put asunder in three weeks.

The most important thing to understand about President Donald Trump’s endeavor is that every new road blazed into a previously unroaded landscape is a disaster for wild landscapes and the creatures who live in them. In two decades reporting on the exploitation of American public lands, I’ve found that the most important first effort in destruction of habitat and the fouling of clean air and water is the building of a road.

A road cut through wilderness is a wound that won’t stop bleeding. It doesn’t matter if it’s paved or unpaved, though a paved road always brings more traffic. Then again, it doesn’t matter whether a road is heavily trafficked or lightly used. The very presence of a road alters the environment around it. This is especially true in high-altitude forested landscapes, such as the La Sals, as roads divert the natural downstream flow of precipitation, producing heavier runoff and more erosion that disrupts the hydrology and sedimentation of nearby waterways. Road runoff carries the poisons that automobiles drip from their chassis. The grinding engines and the sound of rattling metal terrify wildlife. From the tailpipes comes carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, heavy metals. You get more roadkill. You get more hunting and poaching. Roads scare off the cougars and wolves and bears, who learn that death awaits on roads.

Reed Noss, one of the premier conservation biologists in the United States, writes that the cumulative effect of roads blazed into previously unroaded ecosystems is “nothing short of catastrophic.” For the sake of wild things, Noss recommended that most existing roads on public lands “should be closed and obliterated.” He especially liked the idea of keeping out road-attracted humans who “bring along their chainsaws, ATVs, guns, [and] dogs,” who “harass virtually every creature they meet, and leave their mark on every place they visit. The more inaccessible we can keep our remaining wild areas to these cretins, the safer and healthier these areas will be.”


This cool Indian conservationist Bittu Sehgal my mom used to like has made similar points.

But these bogus “humans first!” supporters of endless parasitic, destructive overgrowth and overdevelopment usually attack any common sense.
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