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Saturday, October 11, 2025

🦌 The Dangers of the Forest Tall



The Dangers of the Forest Tall



Please Use These Things For This Lesson 



🦌 The Dangers of the Forest Tall

A Moose’s Tale—Both Serious and Slightly Antlered

🪵 From the Journal of M. Moose, Esq.

I was born beneath a canopy of pine so thick, even the sun had to ask permission to peek through. The forest tall, they call it. And let me tell you—it’s not just tall. It’s tricky. It’s tangled. It’s teeming with lessons.

🌲 Danger #1: The Branch That Whispers Lies

One day, I followed a trail of sweet-smelling berries. Thought I’d found paradise. Turns out, it was a trap laid by a raccoon with a flair for mischief and a questionable moral compass. Lesson: Not everything sweet is safe. Especially if it’s guarded by a raccoon named Gary.

🐻 Danger #2: The Bear With Boundary Issues

I tried to share a watering hole. He tried to share his roar. Lesson: Some creatures don’t want peace—they want space. And sometimes, saying “I’m sorry” means backing away slowly while maintaining eye contact.

🦉 Danger #3: The Owl Who Knows Too Much

He watches. He judges. He quotes Proverbs at midnight. Lesson: Wisdom is good. But unsolicited advice from a bird who never blinks? That’s a different sermon.

🌧️ Danger #4: The Storm That Doesn’t Ask First

One moment, I’m munching moss. The next, I’m a soggy, antlered lightning rod. Lesson: Life changes fast. Shelter matters. So does knowing which trees are less likely to fall on you.

🫢 Danger #5: The Silence That Feels Like Shame

Sometimes, I mess up. Trample a sapling. Snap a branch. Hurt a friend. The forest goes quiet. Lesson: The hardest part isn’t the mistake—it’s saying “I’m sorry.” But when I do, the forest sings again.

🕊️ Final Reflection from M. Moose

The forest tall is full of dangers. But it’s also full of grace. Every broken twig can be a lesson. Every muddy hoofprint can be a path back to peace. And every “I’m sorry” is a bridge—sometimes made of sticks, sometimes made of tears.

So if you ever find yourself lost in the forest tall, remember: Lift your head. Listen for grace. And don’t trust Gary the raccoon.




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