Thereâs a lot of talk about being grounded. People mention staying connected, planting their feet, breathing deeply, keeping a routine. Those things help. They remind the body what steadiness feels like. But grounding has never felt to me like a checklist. Itâs not something to perform or maintainâitâs something that happens when the noise softens, when presence starts to hum quietly beneath everything.
During the Roots share circle last Sunday, that became clear again. The room filled with stories about what keeps people anchoredâwalks, music, prayer, time away from phones. And just as many stories of what pulls them off centerâscrolling, substances, food, the need to stay busy. Every story carried its own kind of tenderness, the human way of reaching for balance. But under all of it, something deeper kept whispering through: grounding isnât found in the actions themselves. Itâs in what those actions help reveal.
Those little ritualsâbreathing, journaling, sitting in silenceâare like the wind through branches. They remind the roots to reach down, not because the ritual is the root, but because it points back toward whatâs already there: the stillness underneath doing. Presence itself.
Presence doesnât arrive through effort. It settles in when resistance loosens. A tree doesnât force its roots deeper; it just grows toward what nourishes it. Life seems to move the same way.
Itâs easy to live mostly in the branchesâreaching for understanding, for progress, for spiritual height. The mind likes the upward motion; it feels like growth. But when roots stop keeping pace with the branches, the whole thing starts to sway. A life built only on light, without depth, can look impressive for a while, but itâs brittle.
Thatâs where the illusion beginsâheight mistaken for depth, expansion mistaken for embodiment, transcendence mistaken for truth. Iâve seen spirituality turn into a kind of escape hatch, a vertical flight from the weight of being human. Freedom without roots can mimic peace, but it carries a certain vacancy. It floats above feeling.
Ungroundedness sometimes looks chaotic, but it can just as easily look serene. Thereâs a version of calm thatâs actually disconnectionââIâm beyond it all, none of this matters.â That kind of detachment once looked noble to me, until I realized how much of it was fear of contact, fear of being touched by life. Thereâs a kind of enlightenment thatâs really just dissociation wearing a white robe.
Real grounding has always shown up closer to the body. It asks for a willingness to stay in contactâwith the ache in the chest, the trembling, the laughter, the hunger, the quiet pulse behind the ribs. It doesnât demand purity; it asks for presence.
The temptation to float away shows up everywhere. It wears many facesâconstant ceremony, endless seeking, identity built around being a âhealerâ or âlightworker,â stories about saving the planet while daily life quietly unravels. Iâve watched people disappear into those clouds, and Iâve disappeared there too. It feels safer to orbit an idea of awakening than to face the rawness of ordinary truth. Easier to imagine being cosmic than to take responsibility for the simple, human parts of life that still need tending.
Ungrounded life finds comfort in false groundâthings that soothe for a moment but donât sustain: screens, substances, overwork, drama, spiritual grandeur. They numb the discomfort that might have been the doorway back to honesty. The stories sound beautiful, but they hover above reality instead of entering it.
Groundedness, on the other hand, keeps returning to whatâs real even when itâs uncomfortable. It doesnât mean having a stable job or a wild life, or any particular form. Iâve seen stability hide deep denial, and chaos hold incredible clarity. Grounding seems less about what the life looks like, more about how much of it is actually being felt.
When the body is allowed to be part of the path again, everything shifts. The sacred stops being somewhere âup thereâ and starts breathing through every simple thingâthe taste of food, the warmth of sunlight, the heaviness of tears. Ayahuasca has taught that better than any concept. She shows vast visions, yes, but her real teaching lands only after the visions fadeâwhen the feet meet the ground again. The ceremony has never been an escape from being human; itâs an invitation back into it.
The image that returns often is the Tree of Life reflected in waterâbranches above, roots below, mirrored perfectly. The deeper the roots go into darkness, the higher the branches can rise toward light. Thereâs no need to choose between them. Real wholeness lives in their meeting.
That balance feels a lot like what the prophecy of the Eagle and the Condor speaks to. The Eagle with its clear mind and sharp sight, the Condor with its soft heart and closeness to the earth. Two ways of knowing that become one when they finally stop competing. The sky doesnât diminish the soil, and the soil doesnât trap the sky. Both are needed for flight to mean anything.
Maybe grounding is just that balance expressed through a human lifeâthe meeting of seeing and feeling, thought and body, spirit and matter. Itâs less a discipline and more a relationship. Something alive that keeps deepening the longer itâs tended.
This kind of rootedness doesnât arrive by pretending to have outgrown pain or fear. It grows by letting pain and fear have a place at the table. It grows by noticing where the pretending still lives, where fantasy still hides whatâs real. That noticing can be uncomfortable, but itâs also where the integrity of presence begins.
Nothing about this feels like instruction. It feels like gravity, quiet and patient. Each time awareness drifts, life has a way of inviting it backâthrough breath, through sensation, through the ordinary moments that donât look spiritual at all. The pull downward isnât punishment; itâs belonging.
The work isnât in climbing higher, itâs in allowing depth. The branches will reach on their own once the roots are strong enough to hold them. Every time attention returns to the presentâthe feel of the earth, the sound of breath, the truth of whatâs actually happeningâanother root finds its way into the soil.
Grounding, in the end, feels less like something to seek and more like something that reveals itself when the seeking quiets. The moment thought stops running ahead or reaching beyond, reality comes rushing back. Thereâs no instruction for that, no formula. Just the simple recognition: here it is again. Here I am again.
The ground never went anywhere.
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