Tuesday, December 3, 2019

Transcendentalist Movement Essays (989 words) -

Transcendentalist Movement Terror at Eerie Mt. ?Go find some twigs to make a splint quickly!?said the guide Chris, with a low tone. ?Its going to storm, it looks really bad.? he shouted. ?Listen Dave, I need you to be still and try not think of the pain.? Chris shrieked. ?Can someone please get me something to soak up the blood?! Oh my God!? Chris demanded. ?Stop staring!? shouted the bearded guide. ?Am I going to die cried Dave. ?No you wont die!? the guide screamed. ?He's going to die, look at that thick puddle of blood. I've never seen that much blood.? The other boys whisper amongst themselves. Just then, one of the younger boys bends his head over and began vomiting on the trail, leaving a hot, moist, putrid odor lingering in the air. That began the misery that nearly ended seven innocent lives on a hiking trip to Eerie Mountain. This was my first personal proof that there is a God. And that we are all linked in some way. ?I become a transparent eyeball; I am nothing; I see all; the currents of the Universal Being circulate through me; I am part or particle of God. Ralph Waldo Emerson believed in the concept of the Oversoul which is described as an ultimate spiritual unity encompasses all existence and in which each human being has an individual share. This idea emphasizes the belief that we (meaning everything) is connected under God. We as humans aren't really individual but a fragment of a whole which he calls Nature. Henry David Thoreau, who studied the teachings of Emerson celebrates the vivid beauty of nature in a novel titled Walden, Thoreau spends more than two years on Emerson's land to try and discover God in nature and to honor his brother. Thoreau was mesmerized by a rainbow and it made such an impact on him that he recorded this event into a chapter titled The Ponds ?Once it chanced that I stood in the very abutment of a rainbow's arch, which filled the lower stratum of the atmosphere, tingling the grass and leaves around, and dazzling me as if I looked through colored crystal. Emerson was very aware of the virtue of nature that he makes this comment in the book Nature, ?as the snake his slough, and at what period soever of life, is always a child. In the woods, is perpetual youth.? Emerson's point about the book was, that nature is far more intricate than the human eye interprets. My experience with nature was similarly rewarding as was Thoreau's. Staring down at Dave's broken hip, and replaying in my mind the fall he suffered, I can't deny that I believed he was going to die. All of a sudden I discovered faith inside of me that I didn't know I had. And with this newfound faith I provided some positive energy to the terrorized children that we accompanied to Eerie Mt. Gawking at Dave's grimacing countenance, I myself started to feel nauseous. From that point the presence of God was never more apparent to me. As we hiked back toward camp, the sun was slowly crawling back to his cave below the horizon and the shimmering stars began to appear. The next day we left Eerie Mt. to take Dave to a hospital, I began to think about the oneness I felt with nature and God that day before. ?It is impossible for a man to be cheated by anyone but himself.? Self Reliance by Emerson challenges us as a society to be individual, and not worry about fitting in or winning someone else's praise. This idea is a perfectly logical notion. Emerson believed that the world is based on conformity. He thought that people are too afraid to be themselves and to voice their opinions and ideas. Emerson thinks we should trust our higher instincts before reverting back to what would be more acceptable. Self Reliance teaches us to trust ourselves and to believe that what is inside although not common can still be admired. This idea of Emersons' demands our society to start questioning things and developing our own theories. As a child, I was taught to be more realistic and to not just accept things as they appear. In life I've learned that everyone will try to influence you to believe what they believe. For the most part, I am a listener, but to those who truly know me, could tell you I also am a questioner. I try to controvert all

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