MOHAMMED’S PATH
A life shaped by the forest
This page is not about achievements or credentials.
It’s about a personal path shaped by silence,
solitude, and years spent living close to the land.
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This is the story behind the experience.
Before the Forest
Mohammed’s relationship with nature began long before he lived in it. Trees were a place of refuge, a quiet presence he returned to whenever life felt heavy.
While others searched for answers in noise and movement, he found calm in stillness. Over time, this connection grew stronger, asking deeper questions about how to live, not just how to escape.
Choosing Silence
Five years ago, Mohammed made a decision that changed everything.
He chose to step away from city life, routine, and familiarity. Not to disappear, but to listen. He left comfort behind and entered the forests of Jerash and Dibbeen with a tent, simple tools, and no clear end date.
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What began as an experiment became a way of life.
Four Years Among the Trees
For four years, Mohammed lived alone in the forest.
He slept under the trees, cooked over fire, followed daylight, and learned to move with the seasons rather than against them.​Solitude was not always easy. But within it, he found clarity, physical strength, emotional balance, and a deep respect for nature’s intelligence.
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The forest became both home and teacher.




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Lessons Carried Forward
Slowness
Presence
Balance
Responsibility
Nature does not rush,
yet everything unfolds.
Listening is more powerful
than searching.
Silence and connection
need each other.
To guide others, one must
first walk the path alone.

Why Share This Path
Mohammad eventually returned to the city, not because the forest
rejected him, but because it asked him to share what it had given.
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He believes that not everyone needs to live in the forest to benefit from it.
Even a single day, when guided gently and with care,
can reset the mind and soften the heart.
​
Today, he guides small groups into nature with the same
simplicity, respect, and attention that shaped his own journey.

This path is not about escape.
It’s about remembering how to be fully present, even for a moment.​
The forest does the work. Mohammad simply holds the space.
