Another superb work by May, integrating psychology and spiritual philosophy, here in a memoir, with recollections from over many years. The author expertly weaves together stories of personal, even intimate, experience with practical wisdom. The book was published the year after May's death.
May shares of how what he called the Power of the Slowing and wilderness led to deep healing within and which brought him in touch with the wilderness - so wildness - all around and within us. Wilderness, therefore, can be experienced anywhere, for wild-er-ness is Nature's wild-ness. Untamed life surrounds us, even in the most structured settings. Wildness defies our attempts to domesticate it.
May writes about our efforts in environmentalism. We cannot heal Nature until we experience ourselves as Nature. For Nature to be healed, we must be healed. The author speaks of how we are fractured persons, for we have alienated ourselves from Nature, thinking it something we are to conquer and manage, rather than live as and in communion with in its innate, natural freedom.
Remarkably, what the Spirit and wilderness taught the author inspired a profound, intimate relationship between May and the cancer killing his body. May, too, was able to experience even the cancer as, not an enemy, but as that wildness, that dance of creation that is just being itself, even in putting to death the body. May came, through the lessons of Nature and by grace, to live in a quiet, ever-flowing gratitude, and, as he says, with an expectancy not expecting anything specific - letting life unfold, including his response, moment-to-moment.
Through inner healing, May, in his final years, even when nearing death, came to know complete happiness for the first time. He initially called this happiness, later joy - something more than what most mean by happiness.
While May was an inclusive, contemplative Christian, The Wisdom of Wilderness is not a religious work in any strict sense. In fact, May sounds very Zen. He recognizes the Power that transformed him may be experienced by others in widely diverse ways. Even when dying and all the losses to the final demise, he learned to live the joy of gratitude and moment-to-moment.