Attached is an article talks about the Wildness and in this assignment, I have to do the proposal essay about this article. So, I have to choose a quote from this article to do my proposal about it. In the proposal, you should mention these instructions: 1- Tell me your place for conversation that you have identified (give me the quotation). 2- Tell me what you see in terms of an opportunity- were you fascinated/shocked/perplexed? Is there a gap/tension/ambiguity/difficulty? 3- Then, tell me your complex, unique, specific, arguable claim! 4- The minimum of 250 words. ’We cannot truly know freedom, nor understand absolute liberty, without wilderness. The wild will exist long after human civilization. ‘ In this quote, there is something that stole my attention and made me think deep about it. How wilderness can last more than us as humans. We should not fight against nature because the result will be obviously total lose to human race against nature. So, we should learn how to live with it instead of demolishing the beautiful jungle and the astonishing coral reef which is the main source of oxygen [ya1] The quote I chose is highlighted: “what I have learned from nature” Some of my fondest childhood memories are with my parents hiking around the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. One memory is particularly vivid. I was six and on the trail to Abrams Falls after a summer rain moved through the forest. The sun was just again peaking through the canopy. As my folks and I moved along the trail I noticed water droplets on the leaves of a rhododendron. We stopped for a rest next to the woody plant along the bank of Abrams Creek. I sat down, letting my hands feel the damp Earth, laden with bryophytes. I studied the beads of water on the plant before turning my considerations to the creek. My love for nature began young. In the wild I am always in awe of water. Water, in its many forms, occupies every part of the forest. Clouds are among my favorite forms water takes. There is nothing like standing on a green mountain bald on a cool spring day — the clouds steal the show. Whether weeping grey or puffy white, when the land is again bursting with life, clouds hug ridges and occupy valleys in ways that can only be described as breathtaking. I once had the holy experience of camping in the Blue Ridge of North Carolina on a late Spring evening at over 5,000 feet. As I hiked to camp I moved across mountain meadows covered in a thick fog, but my destination sat above the clouds. That night around a roaring bonfire, in the company of budding plants and a vast array of newly awakened wildlife, there was a piercing, radiant starry night above, and a sea of clouds cracking with lightning below. All of the heavens witnessed Earth’s wonder. From the clouds, in the chill of January, snow seems to continually fall over temperate Appalachian forests. In the winter, snow dusts the landscape, coating evergreens and the naked limbs of deciduous trees. Whe ...