Ashton Bradford: Independent reading 2

 I have decided to read the book A walk in the woods, which is also a movie. It's about 2 friends that decide to hike the trail not only to rekindle their relationship, but discover their drives in life. The two guys had lost eachother a while ago and decide to hike together. They never made it through the whole trail, but I don't believe that was the point of the trip. What was this book trying to tell me? What was the book saying about the trail as a whole?

The story had a lot of laughs, however a lot of deep looking moments. Throughout the book, the friends struggle and eventually realize that the trail whooped their ass. They're two older gentleman, yet they decided to try to hike the trail anyway. This told me that it doesn't matter your age, you should always try to accomplish new things in life, and to never give up hope on something you truly wish to do. The two interchange various dialogue about life and such, and about their passions. These exchanges truly show the spiritual nature of the trail, giving an example on how people can have therapeutic experiences while hiking. This also shows that the trail heals, as both characters come out stronger at the end. The idea that these characters come out stronger is a weird one, as they had to give up on the trail due to health complications. The strength isn't physical, yet mental, as they have persevered some of the worst conditions imaginable together, and healed from those experiences, coming out as better individuals than they went in as. While being a partial comedy, I believe did a splendid job on showing how the Appalachian Trail can heal people, and how the "magic" of hiking therapy really works.

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