this post was submitted on 29 Jul 2024
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He didn't write "like it's life or death"! Most of the book are meditations on nature and descriptions of landscape. If that's what you came away with then you missed the point.
I mean its been awhile but I recall him musing about a squirel or some other animal and how he would like to eat it do to hunger.
The part you remember was not about eating the animal due to hunger. He was observing that when he was away from "civilization" for long enough he noticed that he started to think in a more primal way. In that case, it was tearing a squirrel to shreds raw with his teeth! (or something) :)
I guess thats what I mean about life and death. Like his experience was so arduous that he was getting primal. Please.