There was once a village where the wind never rested.
It came down from the mountains each morning.
It crossed the fields.
It turned the millstones.
It filled the sails of fishing boats.
It carried seeds into distant valleys.
The people blessed the wind.
For without it, many things could not become.
Yet the wind was troublesome as well.
Sometimes it bent young trees.
Sometimes it scattered roofs.
Sometimes it howled through the night so fiercely that no one could sleep.
So, in time, the villagers asked the Keepers for help.
The eldest Keeper climbed the mountain where the wind was said to be born.
For seven days the Keeper listened.
On the eighth day they descended carrying a long silver cord.
With great care the Keeper fastened the cord around the wind.
From that day forward, the wind obeyed.
It arrived each morning at precisely the same hour.
It blew with precisely the same strength.
Never too little.
Never too much.
The villagers rejoiced.
Children played without fear.
The fishermen always knew when to sail.
Every roof remained secure.
"This," they declared, "is perfect."
Yet as the years passed, strange things began to happen.
The old oaks ceased bending.
Their roots no longer reached so deeply into the earth.
The birds forgot how to ride uncertain currents.
The miller's songs became strangely alike.
The sails carried every boat by the same familiar routes.
Seeds no longer wandered beyond the valley.
The forests grew quieter.
The village became safer.
And smaller.
One autumn evening, a child climbed the mountain.
There, among the rocks, sat an ancient woman whom no one in the village remembered seeing before.
She was gently untying the silver cord.
The child cried out.
"You mustn't do that!"
"The wind will become wild again."
The old woman smiled.
"Will it?"
"The Keeper bound it so we could be free."
The woman nodded thoughtfully.
"And tell me..."
She pointed towards the valley below.
"Why do the trees no longer dance?"
The child had no answer.
Together they watched as the final knot came loose.
The wind hesitated.
Almost shyly.
Then it wandered across the mountains once more.
Not wildly.
Not obediently.
Simply according to its own countless relations.
It found forgotten valleys.
Lifted hidden scents.
Carried distant birdsong into the village.
The trees bowed.
The grasses rippled.
The clouds discovered new shapes.
When the villagers awoke, they were furious.
"Who has stolen our perfect wind?"
But the oldest of the fishermen stood silently upon the shore.
He lifted his face.
Then he laughed.
"I had forgotten," he whispered.
"Forgotten what?" asked the others.
"How to sail."
The years that followed were more difficult.
Roofs sometimes needed mending.
Journeys required judgement once again.
Children learned to read the sky instead of clocks.
The wind could no longer be commanded.
It had to be entered.
Yet gradually something unexpected returned.
The oaks grew stronger.
New flowers appeared in distant fields.
Songs became different again.
Boats discovered shores no one had visited for generations.
The village did not become less ordered.
Its order became richer.
Many years later, the child—now grown old—asked the ancient woman,
"Were you truly the one who untied the wind?"
The woman laughed softly.
"No."
"No?"
"I only untied the cord."
"The wind untied the village."
Travellers still visit the mountain.
Sometimes they ask where the silver cord was buried.
The old villagers simply smile.
"There was never any magic in the cord."
"The magic was believing that freedom could be tied into neat knots."
Then they look towards the forests where the branches still sway in a thousand different rhythms.
And they remember that the wind had never been an enemy.
It had been a teacher.
For the world does not become richer when every path is made certain.
It becomes richer when possibility is given enough form to be entered—
and enough freedom to become otherwise.
So the wind still wanders across the mountains.
Not untamed.
Not restrained.
But participating, as all living things do, in the endless weaving of the Loom.
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