Five Miles Around Stone Mountain
Stone Mountain is usually framed as a single act: go up, look out, come back down.
I didn’t do that.
This time, I walked the long way around—the five-mile loop at the base. Less dramatic. More room to settle into the movement.
The mountain comes and goes. It’s in view sometimes, then replaced by trees, water, stretches where it disappears entirely. Lakes open up along the trail, calm and steady. The windmill is there too—fixed in the landscape, turning slowly, part of the loop rather than a surprise.
Five miles is long enough to stop thinking about pace. Long enough for conversation to thin out. Long enough for the walk to shift from exercise into something quieter.
There were stretches where nothing happened. No overlooks. No moments to document. Just feet on packed dirt, water holding the light, the sound of wind moving through leaves.
By the time the loop closed, I didn’t feel accomplished so much as finished—in the good way. Grounded. Reset.
Not every hike needs a summit.
Some are better when they circle, pause, and let the surroundings change the view for you.











