Tales by the Wanderer
The Wisdom of the Serpent: Looking Ahead to the Year of the Snake
The First Dawn
The air was crisp and silent as I climbed the hill just outside of town, the remnants of New Year’s Eve celebrations scattered in its wake. The horizon was painted with the faint blush of approaching dawn, and the stars, reluctant to give way, still twinkled faintly in the predawn sky.
I wasn’t alone. A figure was already seated at the summit—a woman wrapped in a thick woolen shawl. She turned as I approached, gesturing for me to join her.
“Come to see the first sunrise?” she asked, her breath visible in the cold air.
I nodded, settling onto the frosted grass beside her.
“Every year, I come here,” she said, gazing toward the horizon. “Not to make resolutions or dwell on the past, but to remind myself of beginnings. The first light of the year—it’s a promise, you see. No matter how dark things have been, the sun always rises.”
We sat in comfortable silence, watching as the first rays of sunlight stretched across the land, igniting the frost with a golden glow. The world seemed to hold its breath, poised on the edge of something new.
“It’s not about changing everything all at once,” she continued after a while. “It’s about small steps, like the sun climbing into the sky—steady and sure.”
I nodded, her words settling into my thoughts as the sunlight warmed my face. The new year stretched out ahead like an open road, inviting but unmarked.
As I rose to leave, she smiled. “May this year bring you light, one moment at a time.”
Walking down the hill, I felt a quiet resolve growing within me. The first dawn of the new year had come, not with fanfare, but with the gentle reassurance of new beginnings.
The Winding Path
The Bare Orchard
The Gift of the Moment
The village square was quiet in the early evening, snow blanketing the cobblestones and muffling the usual sounds of daily life. A tall fir tree stood at the center, strung with glowing lights and ornaments that swayed gently in the crisp air. I stood there, admiring the scene, when an elderly man approached, carrying a small bundle in his hands.
“Beautiful, isn’t it?” he said, nodding toward the tree. “People rush around so much during the season, they forget to stop and take it in.”
He opened the bundle to reveal a simple wooden ornament—a star, hand-carved and sanded smooth. “I made this years ago,” he said, his voice soft. “Each year, I add it to the tree. Not because it’s special, but because it reminds me of the real gift of Christmas: being here, in the now.”
He handed it to me, and together we placed it on a low branch. For a moment, we stood in silence, watching the lights twinkle against the darkening sky.
As he turned to leave, he smiled. “The season isn’t about what we give or get—it’s about what we notice, and what we share in the moment.”
I stayed there a while longer, watching the snow fall softly around the glowing tree, feeling the weight of his words settle into my heart.
The Festival of Lights
The Market Bells
The Winter Sea
The shoreline in December was stark but beautiful, the gray waves rising and falling under a pale sky. Seabirds swooped low over the water, their cries blending with the rhythmic crash of the waves. I walked along the beach, the damp wind pulling at my coat, each step sinking slightly into the cold, packed sand.
A lone fisherman sat near the dunes, mending a net. He gestured toward the sea. “Even in winter, it’s alive,” he said. “See how the waves keep moving, how the birds thrive despite the chill? Nature reminds us to keep going, no matter the season.”
His words seemed to mirror the vastness of the sea—simple but infinite. As I continued along the shore, I felt the rhythm of the waves sync with my steps, a quiet reminder of life’s steady continuity.
The Glow of Lanterns
The Evergreen Path
The Quiet Bench
In the middle of a gray, chilly afternoon, I wandered through a nearly empty park, the skeletal trees stretching skyward like quiet sentinels. I found an old bench overlooking a pond, its surface rippled by the icy wind. Sitting down, I pulled my scarf tighter and let the cold air sharpen my senses.
A man approached and sat beside me, his heavy coat and fur-lined hat giving him the look of someone accustomed to the season’s chill. “This is the best time to visit,” he said, gazing at the pond. “No distractions, just the quiet rhythm of winter.”
He turned to me, his expression thoughtful. “It’s in these still moments that we truly connect with the here and now,” he said. “Winter strips everything down to its essence. It’s a chance for the heart-mind to find its own quiet.”
His words felt like the frost in the air—crisp, clear, and undeniable. Together, we sat in silence, letting the winter stillness settle into our hearts.











