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Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home by Nando Parrado
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Miracle in the Andes Quotes Showing 1-30 of 58
“I had always thought that life was the actual thing, the natural thing, and that death was simply the end of living. Now, in this lifeless place, I saw with a terrible clarity that death was the constant, death was the base, and life was only a short, frgile dream. I was dead already. I had been born death, and what I thought was my life was just a game death let me play as it waited to take me. . .

Death has an opposite, but the opposite is not mere living. It is not courage or faith or human will. The opposite of death is love. How had I missed that? How does anyone miss that? Love is our only weapon. Only love can turn mere life into a miracle, and draw precious meaning from suffering and fear. For a brief, magical moment, all my fears lifted, and I knew that I would not let death control me. I would walk through the godforsaken country that separated me from my home with love and hope in my heart. I wouuld walk until I had walked all the life out of me, and when I fell I would die that much closer to my father.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“As we used to say in the mountains, "Breathe. Breathe again. With every breath, you are alive." After all these years, this still the best advice I can give you: Savor your existence. Live every moment. Do not waste a breath.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“You are angry at the God you were taught to believe in as a child. The God who is supposed to watch over you and protect you, who answers your prayers and forgives your sins. This God is just a story. Religions try to capture God, but God is beyond religion. The true God lies beyond our comprehension. We can't understand His will; He can't be explained in a book. He didn't abandon us and He will not save us. He has nothing to do with our being here. God does not change. He simply is. I don't pray to God for forgiveness or favors, I only pray to be closer to Him, and when I pray, I fill my heart with love. When I pray this way, I know that God is love. When I feel that love, I remember that we don't need angels or a heaven, because we are a part of God already.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“My duty is to fill my time on earth with as much life as possible, to become a little more human every day, and to understand that we only become human when we love.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“We all have our personal Andes.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“So I would teach myself to live in constant uncertainty, moment by moment, step by step. I would live as if I were dead already. With nothing to lose, nothing could surprise me, nothing could stop me from fighting; my fears would not block me from following my instincts, and no risk would be too great.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I am no wise man. Every day shows me how little I know about life, and how wrong I can be. But there are things I know to be true. I know I will die. And I know that the only sane response to such a horror is to love.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“Even here, even as we suffer, life is still worth living....”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I have suffered great losses and have been blessed with great consolations, but whatever life may give me or take away, this is the simple wisdom that will always light my life: I have loved, passionately, fearlessly, with all my heart and all my soul, and I have been loved in return. For me, this is enough.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“A human being, as I've said before, gets used to anything.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“Savor your existence. Live every moment. Do not waste a breath.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I tell them I am not at peace in spite of what I suffered, but because of it.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“My hope is that you who are reading this book will not wait so long to realize what treasures you have. In the Andes we lived heartbeat-to-heartbeat. Every second of life was a gift, glowing with purpose and meaning. I have tried to live that way ever since and it has filled my life with more blessings than I can count. I urge you to do the same. As we used to say in the mountains, "Breathe. Breathe again. With every breath, you are alive." After all these years, this is still the best advice I can give you: Savour your existence. Live every moment. Do not waste a breath.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I saw the error I was making. I had been thinking of the disaster as a horrible mistake, as an unscripted deviation from the happy story of the life I had been promised. But now I began to understand that my ordeal in the Andes was not an interruption of my true destiny, or a perversion of what my life was supposed to be. It simply was my life, and the future that lay ahead was the only future available to me. To hide from this fact, or to live in bitterness and anger, would only keep me from living any genuine life at all.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“We were playing a game against an unknown and unforgiving opponent. The stakes were terrible—play well or die—but we didn’t even know the ground rules.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I come from a plane that fell into the mountains. I am Uruguayan. We have been walking for ten days. I have a friend up here who is injured. In the plane there is fourteen injured people. We have to get of here quickly and we don't have any food. We are weak. When are you going to come and fetch us? Please. We can't even walk. Where are we?”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“The mountain was teaching me a hard lesson: camaraderie is a noble thing, but in the end death is an opponent each of us would face in solitude.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in The Andes
“I know the others saw my behaviour as confident and optimistic, and perhaps it gave them hope. But what looked to them like optimism was really nothing of the sort. It was panic. It was terror. The urge that drove me to trek west was the same urge that drives a man to jump from the top of a burning building. I had always wondered how a person thinks in such a moment, perched on the ledge, cringing from the flames, waiting for the split second when one death makes more sense than another. How does the mind make such a choice? What is the logic that tells you the time has come to step into thin air? This morning I had my answer. I smiled are Carlitos, then turned away before he saw the anguish in my eyes.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I had been thinking of the disaster as a horrible mistake, as an unscripted deviation from the happy story of the life I had been promised. But now I began to understand that my ordeal in the Andes was not an interruption of my true destiny, or a perversion of what my life was supposed to be. It simply was my life, and the future that lay ahead was the only future available to me. To hide from this fact, or to live in bitterness and anger, would only keep me from living any genuine life at all. Before the crash, I took so much for granted, but the mountains showed me that life, any life, is a miracle. Now, miraculously, I had been granted a second chance to live. It was not the life I wanted or expected, but I understood that it was my duty now to live that life as richly and as hopefully as I could. I vowed to try. I would live with passion and curiosity. I would open myself to the possibilities of life. I would savor every moment, and I would try, every day, to become more human and more alive. To do any less, I understood, would be an insult to those who hadn’t survived.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“—Todos tenemos nuestros propios Andes”
Nando Parrado, Milagro en los Andes
“—El sol saldrá mañana —me dijo—, y pasado mañana, y el día después. No dejes que esto sea lo más importante que te ha pasado nunca. Mira hacia delante. Tendrás un futuro. Tendrás una vida.”
Nando Parrado, Milagro en los Andes
“My duty is to fill my time on earth with as much life as possible, to become a little more human every day, and to understand that we only become human when we love.”
Nando Parrado; Vince Rause; Masahiko Kaitsu, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“In my despair, I felt a sharp and sudden longing for the softness of my mother and my sister, and the warm, strong embrace of my father. My love for my father swelled in my heart, and I realized that, despite the hopelessness of my situation, the memory of him filled me with joy. It staggered me: The mountains, for all their power, were not stronger than my attachment to my father. They could not crush my ability to love. I felt a moment of calmness and clarity, and in that clarity of mind I discovered a simple, astounding secret: Death has an opposite, but the opposite is not mere living. It is not courage or faith or human will. The opposite of death is love.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“Each of us realized, with a clarity that is hard to describe, that the only crucial thing in life is the chance to love and be loved.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“When hope is lost, the mind protects us with denial, and my denial protected me from facing what I knew.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“You are angry at the God you were taught to believe in as a child,” Arturo answered. “The God who is supposed to watch over you and protect you, who answers your prayers and forgives your sins. This God is just a story. Religions try to capture God, but God is beyond religion. The true God lies beyond our comprehension. We can’t understand His will; He can’t be explained in a book. He didn’t abandon us and He will not save us. He has nothing to do with our being here. God does not change, He simply is. I don’t pray to God for forgiveness or favors, I only pray to be closer to Him, and when I pray, I fill my heart with love. When I pray this way, I know that God is love. When I feel that love, I remember that we don’t need angels or a heaven, because we are a part of God already.” I”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“There is more,” Gustavo told me. “Panchito is dead. Guido, too. And many others.” I shook my head feebly in disbelief. How could this be happening? Sobs gathered in my throat, but before I could surrender to my grief and shock, the voice spoke again, and louder. They are all gone. They are all a part of your past. Don’t waste energy on things you can’t control. Look forward. Think clearly. You will survive.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“The mountains were forcing me to change”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“We were absurdly out of place here, like a seahorse in the desert, or a flower on the moon. A dread began to form in my mind, an unformed thought that I was not yet able to verbalize: Life is an anomaly here, and the mountains will tolerate that anomaly for only so long.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in the Andes: 72 Days on the Mountain and My Long Trek Home
“I wanted to write this book to tell him he was wrong. He did not fail me. He saved my life. He saved me by telling me stories when I was a boy, and those stories helped me find my strength in the mountains. He saved me by working so hard, by never giving in, and by teaching me, through his example, that anything is possible if you are willing to suffer. Mostly, he saved me with his love. He was never an openly affectionate man, but I never doubted his love when I was a boy. It was quiet love, but solid and deep and enduring. When I was in the mountains, stranded in the shadows of death, that love was like a safety line anchored in the world of the living. As long as I held on to that love, I was not lost, I was connected to my home and to my future, and in the end it was that strong cord of love that led me out of danger. When he thought that all of us were dead, my father despaired, and in his pain he gave up his hope for us. But it was not his hope that I needed. He saved me simply by being the father I love.”
Nando Parrado, Miracle in The Andes

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