Reblogged from Journey to Ambeth:
This is the continued story of my weekend away with The Silent Eye. For the first instalment, please click here.
We left The Fox House in a small convoy of cars, heading towards Carl Wark. It’s a Neolithic site, designated a hill fort despite the fact it is like no other hill fort in the area. As we left the cars and started along the trail, we passed between two large stones. Though they were set far back from the path, they nonetheless felt to me as though they marked a gateway of sorts, the beginning of a path.
As we walked the curving path, talking among ourselves, the landscape opened up. To the right the stone was tumbled and jagged, evidence of more recent human activity, blasting into the natural rock for building materials. It felt unnatural, like a scar on the landscape when compared to the sweeping natural beauty to the left of us. Then the path changed, turning down towards a narrow stream that cut the valley in two. A low stone bridge was the only way across. But it was blocked.
A figure stood there in robes of wool, hair wild, a symbol bound on his brow, his staff held out to bar the way. We stopped. The figure looked like Stuart, and it sounded like Stuart, but there was an echo there of an earlier time. ‘Under the weather indeed,’ we muttered, equally entertained and enthralled by the spectacle. It was well done, as was the next part – each of us taking our turn to cross the narrow bridge and be welcomed into the land.
Ritual can be as simple as a few spoken words or a silent acknowledgement – it does not need to be complicated. And so it was here, words spoken and a welcome given, along with a name – a reminder that she was stepping back in time. As she crossed the water and began to ascend, her mood changed, emotion running high. Her fingers strayed to two rings on her right hand, gifts from her two beloved grandmothers – they were quite valuable, but she had felt bound to wear them. Tears prickled her eyes as she touched the golden circles, reminded of their love.
Continue reading Helen’s account of the weekend here.
Thanks for the reblog, Sue! 🙂 Hope your email is running better today – mine is still very slow, so frustrating!
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Thankfully it is, Helen, though WP turned off all my notifications again so I’ve been scrabbling around trying to sort that out too!
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Oh no! What are they doing? Debby Gies was locked out of her site the other day, Hugh’s been sent to spam, Ali lost her notifications for a few weeks… For Happiness Engineers, they aren’t doing much to spread happiness!
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They seem to do this regularly… as if every time they push a button, I automatically ‘block all emails’ which I do not. Grrr….
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Grrr indeed!
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Just makes me wonder what they are up to…
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Oh god. I’m just posting as quickly as they’ll let me, just in case…
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LOL… you and me both 🙂
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😀
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