The Cradle Mountain hike, Tasmania

Chapter 201,880 wordsCompleted

After completing a major project, the narrator seeks reconnection with nature and people and signs up for a group trek along Tasmania’s Overland Track. The hike begins at Cradle Mountain; the party consists of eight hikers (including a younger single woman) and two young guides. On the first day they cross a narrow boardwalk over marshland, then ascend into a volcanic rock landscape under a cool late‑summer sun that soon turns misty. As rain arrives, the group clusters into smaller pods of three‑to‑four, and “hiking conversations” emerge, flowing from love and loss to childhood memories without the usual work‑related small talk.

The narrator likens these exchanges to “adda,” the free‑form, tea‑filled group dialogues of West Bengal, and reflects that the walk recreates a modern version of ancient salons. Each evening the hikers return to hidden cabins about 100 m off the trail, shower, and gather around wine‑filled couches and beanbags. The narrator slips in, “like a cat,” and listens as participants reveal deep personal stories: a dairy‑farming couple discuss their teenage daughter’s coming‑out and the tension between their liberal compassion and conservative politics; a 65‑year‑old former school principal, usually stoic, breaks into tears over missing his wife; other hikers share vulnerabilities about trauma and identity. These disclosures illustrate how the physical fatigue of the day's walking loosens emotional defenses, allowing “trauma rings” in their trunks to surface.

Through this shared “adda,” the group moves from individual isolation to a collective “pool of mutualism,” a metaphorical field beyond right and wrong where varied ages, sexes, and backgrounds converge. The narrator notes the initial hour can feel exhausting for the self‑conscious, but soon the rhythm settles into an ancestral mode of mutual witness, feeling like “home.”

After several days of hiking through glacial mountains, rainforests, and alpine plains, the party arrives at Lake St Clair. They board a wooden ferry to the historic Pumphouse Point lodge, situated on a boardwalk in the lake. The group disperses, and despite the impending separation, no one feels sad; the experience has re‑framed their perspectives and shown that complex moral and emotional issues become manageable when processed together.

Inspired by the power of these conversations, the narrator later organizes similar “addas” in other contexts: inviting strangers, bankers, a climate‑change‑denying neighbor, and others to meet at a wine bar, turning phones off, and guiding 90‑minute meandering discussions on climate, family, guilt, and stagnation. The sessions leave participants feeling “enlivened” and often lead to requests for repeat meetings. The narrator also reflects on psychological research indicating that deep, attentive group dialogue—especially with pauses after important statements—helps disconfirm fear and builds communal safety during crises. The chapter concludes with a call to readers to join or create their own deep‑thinking conversation groups, using online platforms, book clubs, or ad‑hoc gatherings to sustain the connective practice discovered on the Overland Track.