Boyd Varty’s The Lion Tracker’s Guide to Life reads like a spiritual self-discovery journey. Varty grew up on South Africa’s Londolozi Game Reserve learning lion-tracking skills from master African trackers. He has spent years working in wildlife conservation and safari guiding.

Listening to the book on a recent long-distance flight felt meditative. I was transported to the deep, often musty African bush while trackers search for fresh footprints, read wind patterns and look for subtle clues hidden within the landscape around them.

Varty does a phenomenal job of using nature as a metaphor and his work as a guide and teacher, illuminating lessons about both human and animal life on the trail. He urges us to “track” our own lives as we navigate uncertainty, challenges, and questions of meaning. Pay attention to the clues, adapt to changing conditions, and pursue what makes us feel most alive.

Don’t lose that wild streak inside you. Think of a time when you did exactly what you wanted without concern for anyone else’s opinion. Varty asks us to not forget the thrill of acting in complete alignment with our instincts.

Varty warns us about comfort zones in a profound way. As a tracker in the wild, he is constantly aware of danger and the many unseen forces at play. Yet he asks whether fear should be our guide or merely something to acknowledge and move through. As he writes, “A life with no sharp edges would be worse. The hazard of modern times is the danger of no danger.”

Bring your attention back to what matters. Is the track you’re following truly the one you are meant to be on? A tracker does not always find a perfectly laid trail. Yet, paradoxically, venturing down a path and discovering no track at all is itself a form of tracking. It reveals where to go next.

“Tracking is a function of directing attention, bringing our awareness back to this subtle inner trail of the wild self, and learning to see its path.”

Varty suggests that the most alive lives are not simply about achieving work-life balance, but about the convergence of work, mission, and meaning. When vision becomes mission, the work itself becomes a source of aliveness. The question is not simply whether you are pursuing your purpose, but whether you are fully present for the journey.

Read this book to get lost in the bushes of South Africa’s Londolozi Game Reserve while you discover the path to your own joy.

 

 

 

Featured Article Image: Copyright @Tswalu – Tswalu Kalahari Reserve from Twitter

 

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About The Article Author:

Hi, I’m Rachana. Its been my dream for years to do something to consciously create a better future where every one of us is excited about our own potential. My challenge to everyone is that they aspire for their personal best and leave a legacy of their work through their contributions to mankind.

One more thing. In December of 2044, I hope to win the Nobel.

Will you join me on this journey of growth and transformation?
Namasté.

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