There are some journeys that stay with you long after you return. Not because of photographs or sightseeing checklists, but because they quietly shift something inside you.
Yesterday’s visit to Tsongmo Lale and Nathu La felt like one of those journeys. The drive was breathtaking in the truest sense of the word. Snow-capped peaks stood silently against the sky while clouds played hide and seek around them. Every few minutes, another waterfall would appear unexpectedly around a bend, as though the mountains wanted to keep surprising us.
There was a certain rawness to everything around us. Nature untouched, unfiltered, existing in its purest form. And then we reached Nathu La. Almost on cue, snowflakes began to fall softly around us. It felt magical, almost cinematic. The universe seemed unusually generous in that moment.
But mountains, I realised once again, have their own language. And sometimes that language is restraint. The roads were heavily jammed. The climb upwards was slippery and difficult. Some people around us kept moving ahead, many falling back, some giving up half way. As many gathered around the shop selling oxygen cans to pick up one, I refused to feel defeated. Every few steps, my breathlessness increased. The higher I tried to go, the more the slope seemed to push back gently but firmly, reminding me who truly holds control there.
Everything was visible. The border was right there. Yet it somehow felt distant. And so I stopped climbing. Oddly enough, that decision did not feel like defeat. It felt like acceptance. A quiet acknowledgment that nature does not always need to be conquered, completed, or consumed fully to be appreciated. Sometimes, its greatest lesson lies in knowing when to pause.
As I stood there catching my breath, another image stayed with me - patches of fresh white snow stained black by diesel fumes from the endless line of vehicles below. That disturbed me.
We travel to the mountains searching for purity, silence, and escape. Yet in our attempt to experience these fragile places, we often become contributors to the very damage threatening them.
I have always loved the mountains deeply. But every time I visit them now, I carry a small sense of guilt alongside the wonder. The guilt of the carbon footprint I leave behind while chasing untouched beauty.
Perhaps sustainable travel is not just about carrying reusable bottles or avoiding plastic. Perhaps it also begins with humility...recognising that nature is not a backdrop created for our consumption. It is an ecosystem trying to survive despite us.
The mountains ask for very little from us. Just softness. Silence. Respect. And maybe loving the mountains is not always about reaching the top. Maybe it is also about learning when to stop climbing, when to step lightly, and when to simply stand still long enough to listen.


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