I’m perched on a rocky outcrop, looking down on the pond from above at a distance. A comfortable breeze, bordering on windy, flows across the water pushing ripples to the shore. Thick tufts of vegetation border the bond at all sides, and sounds of birds come from inside. It sounds so alive, the zone of watery vegetation. What plants are these? I wish I knew.
I wonder what it would be like to push right through that all of vegetation and plunge into what lies beyond. How many steps before my shoes first meet the water? The birds would scatter, flying up from the most unsuspected locations. Soon my shoes are waterlogged and my vision is obscured by the stalks that rise above my head. I continue on, fighting through the thickness of it, and finally, the light! The pond is in front of me, below me, up to my knees. It’s the only way to see this particular pond from up close. There isn’t a single exposed section of shoreline.
My imagination takes me through the experience, to a place where I am reluctant to go. Even though I want to explore that unknown wetland habitat, the practical consequences hold me back. There is certainly someone out there who is so caught up with nature that they would willingly do what I described, unfazed by the soiled and soaked clothing that would result. I’m not that person.