I'm walking along a winding garden path. It's midnight and the sky is filled with a million twinkling stars. I can hear a small stream burbling somewhere just out of sight. Elderly, gnarled trees with vivid purple flowers arch over my path, blocking out most of the starlight. Though I can't see the sky, I know that the stars are twinkling; their faint and friendly light streams through the branches and lands among my bare feet.
I walk and walk on, relishing the soft night breeze that wafts around me. I hear an owl hooting in the distance. Not a single other human soul is near me, and I find glory in solitude.
The path meanders gently uphill. I climb steadily, breathing slow and deep. I am safe within my physical form. It is a good vessel, and the physical world is full of sensuous pleasures to enjoy.
Finally, I emerge from the tree-lined path at the top of a hill. I am at its highest point. I can feel the earth beneath me, mossy and green and alive, breathing in the moonlight. Everything feels tingly and alive tonight. The stars, and the trees, and the earth, and especially the moon.
The moon is wide and white and full, dripping with liquid silver. I turn my face to look upon her glory, and I am bathed in her numinous light. As I bask under her gaze, I feel the oddest sensation. It is as if, my whole life, my skin had been prickly and hot and uncomfortable, but I never knew it because it had been constant. And now finally, blessedly, I have been dunked into a cool and soothing pool, lovely and dark and deep. The cessation of the pain I never knew I had is instantaneous and heady, an invigorating, icy rush.
I open my mouth to the moon wide, and wider still, hoping to imbibe her luminous essence deep within my being. It's not enough. I need more, desperately. I need to feel the moon's glow everywhere.