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The Four Agreements: Your Backcountry Code of Conduct

  • Bryna Sisk
  • Feb 3
  • 2 min read

In his classic book, Ruiz explains that everything we do is based on "agreements" we have made—with ourselves, with others, and with life. Most of these agreements were made when we were young and didn't have a choice (the Inherited Map). In recovery, we realize these old agreements are the very things making our packs so heavy.


To find the summit, we have to "re-contract" with ourselves using these four simple, but difficult, rules.


The backcountry has its own set of survival rules, and your recovery journey is no different. Before you take another step today, check your heading against these four landmarks. Which agreement do you need to lean on most right now? 🧭🏔️ #BackcountryRecovery #FourAgreements #GuidedRecovery
The backcountry has its own set of survival rules, and your recovery journey is no different. Before you take another step today, check your heading against these four landmarks. Which agreement do you need to lean on most right now? 🧭🏔️ #BackcountryRecovery #FourAgreements #GuidedRecovery

1. Be Impeccable With Your Word

  • The Trail Reality: In the backcountry, if you say you have enough water but you’re lying to yourself, you’re in danger.

  • The Recovery Take: This isn't just about not lying to others; it’s about the Internal Dialogue. Stop using your word to speak against yourself. No more "I’m a failure" or "I’ll never get this right." When you speak your truth, you clear the deadfall from your path.


2. Don’t Take Anything Personally

  • The Trail Reality: If a storm rolls in, the mountain isn't "out to get you." It’s just weather.

  • The Recovery Take: When a member of your Tribe lashes out or someone triggers your "Neural Muddy Trenches," realize it is a reflection of their map, not yours. Taking things personally is like picking up someone else’s heavy rocks and putting them in your own pack. Leave them on the ground.


3. Don’t Make Assumptions

  • The Trail Reality: Assuming a frozen lake is thick enough to walk on without testing it is a recipe for disaster.

  • The Recovery Take: We often live in the "What If" Wilderness, assuming we know what others are thinking or how a situation will end. Assumptions create the Atmospheric Fog of anxiety. Ask questions. Seek clarity. Don't navigate based on a guess.


4. Always Do Your Best

  • The Trail Reality: Your "best" on a sunny day is different than your "best" when you have a sprained ankle in a blizzard.

  • The Recovery Take: This is the ultimate tool for self-care. Some days, your recovery "best" is a 10-mile climb. Other days, it’s simply building a shelter at Spike Camp and surviving the night. If you always do your best, you eliminate the "dead weight" of regret and self-judgment.


The Navigator’s Conclusion

These four agreements are the "LNT" (Leave No Trace) principles of the mind. By adopting them, you stop polluting your own internal landscape and start navigating with a clear heading.

 
 
 

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