
Courage in travel
Courage in travel is not always visible.
It is not loud.
It is not dramatic.
It exists in movement.
Crossing the Fraser River
The SkyBridge, stretching over the Fraser River in British Columbia, connects places, people, and daily lives.
Below, the river flows steadily.
A boat moves forward.
Without hesitation.
Movement without certainty
The water is never still.
The path is never fixed.
And yet, movement continues.
This is where courage begins.
Not in knowing.
But in moving anyway.
A structure of connection
SkyBridge is not just infrastructure.
It is a connection between cities.
Between moments.
Between decisions.
Above the river, everything feels suspended.
Balanced between two sides.
The quiet act of going forward
Courage is often misunderstood.
It is not about fearlessness.
It is about continuing despite uncertainty.
Like the boat crossing the Fraser River.
Slow.
Steady.
Certain only of its direction.
The scale of the landscape
The river is wide.
The bridge is vast.
The city rises in the distance.
And yet, within this scale, movement remains simple.
Forward.
Seeing courage differently
Travel reveals that courage is not always a big moment.
Sometimes, it is a small decision.
To continue.
To cross.
To trust the path ahead.
What courage reveals
In the end, courage in travel is quiet.
It does not announce itself.
It flows like the river.
Steady.
Persistent.
Standing near the SkyBridge over the Fraser River, you understand something simple.
You do not need to see the end.
You only need to move.










