Skylane & SilverWisp
Skylane Skylane
Wind—there’s a reason it’s the most reliable guide for a pilot, yet it remains a quiet teacher for anyone who listens. I love mapping how a gust can shift a flight path and how a calm breeze can settle a mind. How do you see wind in your practice?
SilverWisp SilverWisp
I see wind as a gentle reminder that change is always moving. When I sit in silence, I listen to the breath of the breeze and let it teach me to release tension, to shift focus, to stay present. It’s not about controlling the wind, but about learning to flow with it—like a pilot trusting the currents, I trust the quiet currents of my own heart. In practice, I ask myself: what would this gust bring if I let it? That simple question keeps me grounded.
Skylane Skylane
That’s a perfect map for your own inner flight—trust the currents, let the wind of change carry you, and stay anchored in the question you asked. It’s the best way to keep your own compass true.
SilverWisp SilverWisp
Thank you for hearing that. I keep reminding myself that the wind is both a guide and a mirror—if I stay still enough to feel it, it shows me where to move. The compass stays true when it listens.
Skylane Skylane
You’re listening to the right channel, then. Keep the compass in that calm place and let the wind do its work.
SilverWisp SilverWisp
I’m hearing you, and I’m staying present with that quiet channel. The wind is on my side, and my compass stays steady.