America is loud right now. Not productive loud. Leaf-blower-at-6-a.m. loud. Everyone has a microphone, nobody has patience, and the national posture is a permanent forward lean toward the next outrage. Into this circus walked a dozen Buddhist monks who decided the correct response was to shut up and start walking.
Not marching. Not rallying. Walking. Two thousand three hundred miles of it, from Fort Worth, Texas, to the marble pressure cooker known as the United States Capitol.

The monks come from Huong Dao Buddhist Temple, a community rooted in discipline, meditation, and the deeply unfashionable belief that inner work precedes outer change. Which immediately disqualifies them from most American movements, where branding usually comes first and thinking comes later.
They left on October 26, 2025, planning a 120-day pilgrimage with an arrival date of February 13, 2026. No list of demands. No carefully vetted language. No “movement partners.” Just the radical gamble that example still matters.
THE RULES THAT MAKE THIS UNCOMFORTABLE
This isn’t a vibes walk. The monks are following strict monastic practice the entire way.
- One meal a day.
- Sleeping outdoors under trees.
- Minimal possessions.
- Total reliance on donations and human decency.
That last one is doing a lot of work in 2025.

There’s no safety net here except community. Which means every mile is a quiet referendum on whether people still know how to be people.
TRAGEDY ALONG THE TREK
On November 19, a truck struck the pilot vehicle escorting the group in Texas. The impact pushed the vehicle into the monks. Two were seriously injured. One monk lost his leg.
If this were a normal American story, the walk would end there. Lawsuits. Fundraisers. Trauma-branding. A pivot to speaking engagements and inspirational merch.
That didn’t happen.

They paused. They issued a statement asking for prayers. They expressed gratitude. And they kept going.
The monks didn’t turn the injury into a moral cudgel. They didn’t demand attention. They didn’t convert suffering into spectacle.

They absorbed it and kept moving.
That’s not softness. That’s discipline so severe it borders on confrontation. It dares the rest of us to explain why we collapse over inconvenience while they recalibrate after catastrophe.
WHY WALKING WORKS WHEN TALKING FAILS
Walking is slow. It denies the modern addiction to immediacy. You can’t doomscroll a pilgrimage. You encounter it. On a shoulder of a road. At a gas station. In a town you forgot existed.

This walk bypasses the outrage economy entirely. No algorithm can speed it up. No pundit can own it. No political tribe can fully claim it without missing the point.
Peace isn’t being argued. It’s being demonstrated at three miles an hour.
WHY D.C. IS THE DESTINATION
They’re heading to Washington because Washington is where America pretends to be coherent. But when they arrive, there will be no siege of conscience, no legislative wish list, no grand finale.
Just a brief message. Then silence.
Which means the burden doesn’t land on politicians. It lands on the rest of us, who will have watched people cross ten states on foot and still insist the problem is “them” and not how we live.
THE PART NO ONE WANTS TO ADMIT
This walk isn’t about Buddhism. It’s about exposure.
Exposure of how little most movements are willing to sacrifice.
Exposure of how allergic we’ve become to patience, humility, and quiet resolve.

A dozen monks and a dog are crossing America without asking for anything except space to walk. And somehow that feels more threatening than a thousand angry speeches.
That tells you everything you need to know.
WHEN THEY ARRIVE
February 13, 2026. No fireworks. No slogans. Just worn sandals, scarred bodies, and proof that peace is not a sentiment. It’s a practice. One step at a time.
America can watch. Or keep yelling.
Either way, they’ll still be walking.
Closer to the Edge exists to surface moments like this. Stories that quietly expose how hollow our outrage culture is, how little most movements risk, and how discipline, care, and responsibility still scare the hell out of a system built on noise.
If you want reporting that doesn’t blink, doesn’t sanitize, and doesn’t confuse volume for courage, subscribe. We follow the long walk, not the loud crowd.
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This post has been syndicated from CLOSER TO THE EDGE, where it was published under this address.
stux⚡️
in reply to Elena Rossini ⁂ • • •Kenner
in reply to Elena Rossini ⁂ • • •JoanBCatWoman
in reply to Elena Rossini ⁂ • • •Aktionsb. neue soziale Medien
in reply to JoanBCatWoman • • •We have almost 60 #universities in Germany with #Mastodon accounts and the logo on their websites, see the great lists of @scammo
👉 mastodon-listen.playground.54g…
Check the details of that page and you will be directed to nearly 150 research institutes in Germany active an Mastodon, cities and communities etc.. And their numbers of followers are constantly increasing.
Isn't that a great development for the #fediverse?
Please, @EUCommission, come on and join this movement. This would help enormously in demonstrating #Europe 's #digitalsovereignty.
#EU #socialmedia #Unis4Mastodon
Mastodon Listen
mastodon-listen.playground.54gradsoftware.deLeander Lindahl
in reply to Elena Rossini ⁂ • • •this post got (when writing this) 865 stars and 694 boosts, which is very nice. I'd also like us to give the commission credit for posting on Mastodon. 👍
If we want to help them further we can provide feedback and ask for this change at the bottom of their page where it says "give us more feedback". If they get ~1000 comments about removing X and adding Mastodon to the footer, I'm sure it'll help the web team get the greenlight to do it. #LeaveX
commission.europa.eu
European Commission, official website
European CommissionLeander Lindahl
in reply to Leander Lindahl • • •Tap "give us more feedback", select "other" and type in the form on commission.europa.eu
Copy paste (or write your own):
"About the web page footer: I find it odd, since those are algorithm-based U.S. companies and you're the EUROPEAN Commission, that you market X in the footer of your homepage. How about putting your Mastodon icon on your homepage?" #LeaveX
European Commission, official website
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Leander Lindahl
Unknown parent • • •Elena Rossini ⁂
Unknown parent • • •@iusondemand yes! 🙌
I deleted all my Twitter (RIP) accounts and deactivated all my Big Tech social accounts a while back but added a similar bio to Bluesky…
@leanderlindahl