This story was born from a quiet question—one we rarely pause to ask in a world moving too fast to listen: What if the earth is not merely around us, but within us?
We speak of land as property, of forests as resources, of rivers as utilities. We draw lines on maps and call them borders, forgetting that roots do not recognize boundaries and that water remembers every hand that has touched it. Somewhere along the way, humanity learned how to take, but slowly forgot how to belong.
The Breath Between Soil and Soul is not a tale of heroes in the conventional sense. It is a story of listeners. Of those who stand still long enough to hear what the wind carries, what the ground remembers, what silence tries to say. It explores the fragile, often ignored thread that binds human life to the living world—not as metaphor alone, but as truth.
Within these pages, the environment is not a backdrop. It is a presence. It watches, it responds, it endures. And when pushed beyond endurance, it speaks—not in words, but in consequences. The characters who walk this path are flawed, searching, and deeply human. Their choices echo outward, touching soil, water, air, and ultimately, each other.
This story does not claim that nature is gentle, nor that humanity is cruel by nature. It suggests something more uncomfortable and more honest: that balance is a responsibility, and silence is also a decision. Every breath we take is borrowed. Every step we leave behind is a mark.
If this story unsettles you, let it. If it moves you, listen to why. And if, when you close this book, you find yourself pausing—just once—to notice the ground beneath your feet or the air filling your lungs, then the breath between soil and soul has reached you.
Because the earth is always speaking.
The question is whether we choose to hear it.
— Prof. Ishwar Singh
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