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Wayfinding, creating, reflecting

Dreams of the child in me

I have recently (yesterday and today!) been reminded of my dream as a child to be an archaeologist. I was fascinated with the stories of the Egyptians in primary school, then visiting the British Museum and Natural History Museum (many times). This morphed into a fascination with Natural History, volunteering at Tullie House Museum in…

That time of year

It seems to be that reflective time of year once more. I wanted to write a reflection a year since starting my PhD journey, but alas the beginning of October didn’t feel like the right time. Now feels like the right time. There are several strands to this braided journey that I have visualised in…

Winter Solstice, Winter Solace

To mark Winter Solstice is to be thankful for the light returning, celebrate the deep midwinter and connect with our ever-cycling seasons. We may feel held in place, a sort-of-static in the pandemic, but the natural wheel-of-the-year keeps turning. The Oak King triumphs over the Holly King as the light returns once more in their…

A time of transitions: a focus on farming

I’ve been part of and listened to many conversations, discussions and presentations about farming and landscapes in the UK over the last 3 months or so. If you’re not already aware, there’s about to be a monumental transition for agriculture due to the UK’s withdrawal from the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) which is created and…

Degrowth Vienna Conference 2020

So much is happening in the onlineverse/onlinesphere that it becomes tricky to choose what to attend and when you’ve had too much screen time. I chose to sign up to the online Degrowth Vienna 2020 conference (29/05-01/06) as I’d hoped to attend the Manchester conference in-person but this has been postponed until 2021. This conference…

Wabi-sabi

I came across the Japanese philsophy of wabi-sabi a while back now. You can distill into 3 simple words: impermanent, imperfect and incomplete. Wabi-sabi philosophy values the process and the journey rather than some end-point or goal. Are there actually any endings or just constant becomings? Having a vision to move towards is a useful…

Dandelion dreams

Dandelions are beautiful and they are the first food for the bees. Their bright yellow flowers are a welcome burst of colour after the winter and early spring. The flowers are followed by heads of fairy-like floaty seeds, which create a sphere of softness and potential. My friend recently compared creating a PhD to a…

Blue for bluebells

Starting our walk with Nova, the collie-dog, we turned out of our gate and on to the lane to be met with faded, dying bluebells. Not the “oh the bluebells are finished”-type dying, rather the dried-out, dehydrated-type dying. We haven’t had proper Cumbrian rain for over 8 weeks now. Maybe the shallower soil and more…

Viral commonality

This situation we find ourselves in is effecting everyone in multiple, multifaceted, good, bad, in-between and unknown ways. Everyone reacts within their own context of course or is maybe forced into certain ways by systemic controls. Any which way we are generally reacting to this situation not to just protect ourselves and our own, but…

The Unknown

We met without planningduring our everyday.Everyday for a while before.And then you made me pause.Pausing for breath,distanced from beings,yet closer to our commonness.And here you are.Flexing and broadening,opening and closinglike a black hole.Inside and outside my being.Of me you were born,and yet unfamiliar.Making the familiar strange.The unknown stopped me in my tracks,letting the horizon take…

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