At dawn, the monk walked to the edge of the water.
Mist hovered low, soft as breath, dissolving the horizon into nothing. The surface of the lake was neither still nor restless—it simply was, a quiet shifting that held no intention. He paused there, sandals damp with dew, listening not for sound, but for the absence of resistance.
He had once been told that to walk on water required faith greater than fear. Not a stubborn denial of danger, nor a reckless leap into the unknown, but a surrender so complete that the idea of “impossible” no longer had a place to stand. The teaching lingered in him, though he did not cling to it.
Because clinging, too, was a kind of sinking.
He stepped forward.
His foot met the surface.
There was no miracle in the way stories would tell it—no spectacle, no breaking of laws, no gasp from unseen witnesses. The water did not harden beneath him, nor did it yield. Instead, there was simply no division between foot and lake, no conflict to resolve.
Where fear might have arisen, there was only attention. Where doubt might have taken root, there was only presence.
He took another step.
The “sea” of life—the shifting, uncertain, endlessly moving current of existence—had once felt like something to cross, something to conquer. But now, in the clarity of this moment, it revealed itself differently. There was no crossing. No other side.
Only movement within movement.
Faith, he realized, was not belief in an outcome. It was the absence of separation between himself and what unfolded. It was the quiet dissolving of the one who tries to control, replaced by an openness that allowed everything to be as it was.
The lake rippled.
So did his breath.
The monk neither floated nor sank because there was no longer a “he” standing apart, testing the world. The turbulence of life—the storms, the uncertainty, the impossible demands—lost their weight when there was no resistance to them.
Water moved.
He moved.
The same movement.
For a moment, the teaching revealed itself fully—not as something to achieve, but as something that had always been true. To walk on water was not to master the elements, but to release the illusion of separation from them.
The monk stopped in the middle of the lake, though there was no center.
The mist began to lift, revealing sky reflected in every direction. Above and below were indistinguishable. He looked down and saw clouds drifting beneath his feet, then looked up and saw the same sky stretching endlessly outward.
There was no higher power to reach toward.
No self to abandon.
Only this—unbroken, immediate, complete.
He closed his eyes.
A step, a breath, a ripple.
And in that quiet, the impossible had never existed at all.
