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Here’s a clear 3-point breakdown of “How to Feel at One with Nature” by Lewis Coyne:
1. “Oneness with Nature” Is Both a Feeling and a Deeper Insight
The idea—found in traditions from Buddhism to Baruch Spinoza—isn’t just a cliché.
At a basic level, it’s a feeling:
Calm, peaceful moments in nature
A sense of losing yourself in something bigger
But it can also be an insight:
A realization about how we relate to the world
👉 So “being at one” isn’t just relaxation—it can be philosophically meaningful
2. True Oneness Includes All of Nature—Not Just the Pleasant Parts
We usually feel “at one” with nature when it’s:
Peaceful
Beautiful
Non-threatening
But this is only half the story.
Nature is also:
Harsh
Chaotic
Sometimes dangerous
👉 If we only connect with the “nice” parts, we’re not truly connecting with nature as a whole.
Real oneness means:
Accepting both beauty and brutality
Recognizing we are part of the entire system—not just its pleasant side
3. We Are Already One with Nature—We Just Don’t Realize It
Drawing on Thích Nhất Hạnh and the idea of inter-being:
Everything exists through interconnection
Our bodies (water, cells, nutrients) come from the Earth
👉 So we don’t become one with nature—we already are
The practice is simply to notice it.
Tools like mindfulness help:
Paying attention while eating, walking, breathing
Seeing the connection between everyday actions and the natural world
Bottom Line
Feeling at one with nature isn’t just a peaceful moment—it’s a shift in awareness.
👉 You’re not separate from nature trying to reconnect
👉 You’re part of it—and mindfulness helps you see that clearly
If you want, I can turn this into a simple daily practice (like a 2–5 minute routine) to actually feel this more often.
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