Barefoot ~ S. S. #writephoto

heavens meet on earth

frolicsome play-date partners

planting magic

Continue reading at Getting Lost

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Eldest

“Just how old are you?”
Although youth has long died,
“As young as the moment,”
My body replied.
“If I want to play out
In the sun, or climb trees,
Run laughing through dewdrops,
…I’ll do as I please.
I have a few wrinkles,
My hair’s going grey…
Inside I’m a child
And I still need to play.”

“Just how old are you then?”
My body asked mind,
“As old as conception,
Just think and you’ll find
I’ve been here all along,
In your cells and your brain,
Learning forever and seeking to gain
From experience, wisdom
That I can impart…
But perhaps we should ask
Just how old is the heart?”

“Just how old are you?”
Said the heart, “Here’s the deal…
I’m living two lives,
One to beat, one to feel.”
To the body, heart answered,
“My beating is yours.”
To the mind it replied,
“When you feel, I’m the cause.
Through me we are growing,
A one made of three,
But there is another
Our eyes do not see.”

As the three worked together
As one, they were whole.
“Just how old are you?”
Asked the three of the soul.
“We are older than time,
We are many made one,
We are you, we are I,
We are Sun, we are Son,
We are Mother and Daughter
And Father and Friend,
Born of the Infinite
Life without end.”

Unseen in the shadows
Infinity smiled…
The soul, after all,
Is no more than a Child.

Posted in alchemy, Ancient sites, Art, essence, Photography, Poetry, Spirituality | Tagged , , , , , , | 23 Comments

Choose to see light! ~ Happysoul #writephoto

My disturbed mind,

Sought some solace.

Came by as usual

Continue reading at Live Love Laugh Learn

Posted in photo prompt, Photography, Poetry | 2 Comments

Novelty #midnighthaiku

Perfection dismissed

Seeking transient novelty

Gilding the lily

Posted in Photography, Poetry | Tagged , , | 19 Comments

Cover Reveal: ‘Paranormal Warwickshire’ by SC Skillman

Reblogged from SC Skillman Author:

I’m delighted to be able to bring you the cover reveal for my new book, Paranormal Warwickshire, which is due to be released by Amberley Publishing on 15th November 2020.

PARANORMAL WARWICKSHIRE by SC Skillman
Paranormal Warwickshire by SC Skillman

I’ve been looking forward to this for several months, as I wondered which of the photos (taken either by myself, by my son Jamie or my daughter Abigail) would be chosen for the front cover! Would it be the very atmospheric night shot of St Mary’s Warwick against an inky blue sky, the path into the graveyard to the left, and light spilling out from the windows?

Continue reading at SC Skillman Author

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Reminding me~ Christine Bialczak #writephoto

Silver sunlight on the water

Reminds me there are dreams.

Ripples flow through shallow ponds

Reminds me there are problems.

Soft mud lines the pond

Reminds me there are challenges.

Continue reading at Stine Writing

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A Quick Pint Down the Pig & Ferret

zozo and jools's avatarUSUAL MUTTWITS

“Sparky’s a whippet, init! Sort of a pocket-sized Greyhound, ha ha!
But ‘is big heart makes up for ‘is small paws and that’s down to solid training. Nah, not cay-nine training, I’m talking real training, mental and classical training – yeah, listening ter rock music an’ that.
Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Golden Earing and, o’corss, them bloody overlords themselves, lyk, Led Zep.
Why’s he shakin’? Nah, all whippets do that. But Sparky’s just vibrating with honest pounding rock from ‘alls of Val-halla itself. He’d strut an air guitar if ‘e had the fingers. Show us another mutt wot can do that?”

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A Thousand Miles of History XXXVII: Toeing the Line

One of our main aims in taking the Cornwall trip, quite apart from the sheer beauty of the place and the fact that it is strewn with more ancient and sacred places than you could visit in a lifetime, had been to visit some of the sites on the Michael Line. The Line is a subject of much debate and is believed to be a ley… or an ancient trade-route, an earth energy current, a total fabrication, pure coincidence or a pilgrim route, depending upon your particular bias. About the only thing that can be said about it without argument is that it is a mystery.

The line runs from Carn Les Boel in the south westernmost part of Britain right across to Norfolk, on the east coast and is marked along its entire length by the presence of ancient sites. Some of these sites are archaeological treasures dating back to the earliest marks mankind made upon our landscape, others are relatively modern, and include medieval crosses, holy wells and churches a mere thousand years old. Such churches, though, were usually built on ancient sacred sites, so it is probably true to say that all the points thus marked were already held sacred by our early ancestors.

St Michael the Archangel, Skipton, Holy Trinity church, Yorkshire

The name ‘Michael Line’ comes from the fact that many of the churches on this line are dedicated to St Michael… the beatified dragon-slaying archangel of Christian myth. Leys are often referred to as ‘dragon lines’ and it is the energy of the red and white dragons of old Albion that flows through the veins of our land. The symbolism of St Michael with his dragon and blade is something we see in many old churches. Often, the dragon is not being skewered by the saint, but simply subdued and held at the point of the weapon. One interpretation of this is that Christianity triumphs over evil… another, often seen by the ecclesiastical establishment as being the self-same thing, it that it triumphs over pagan belief. It is equally possible to interpret the image symbolically, and have the rule of Man claiming ‘dominion’ over the natural order of the earth… or of Man’s spiritual nature in complete control of the ‘lower’ instincts.

St Michael holds the Balance, Brentor

The other symbol often seen in St Michael’s hands is that of the Scales. We had seen his image holding the Balance only days before at Brentor, just an hour’s drive from the village of St Cleer, where we now found ourselves. We had no real intention of visiting St Cleer, but I happened to know it had an old church, and as Trethevy Quoit falls within the parish boundaries, it would have felt rude not to pay our respects.

St Cleer, however, is not on the Michael Line, but, as we later found, along with many of the other sites we had not intended to visit, it is on the Mary Line. So, for that matter, were Trethevy Quoit, Boscawen-Un and a few places that we were to visit on our way home. The Mary Line, marked by places named for Mary, the Christian embodiment of the Mother, follows the same principles as the Michael Line, but weaves its way sinuously around its masculine partner. It was something of a wry surprise to realise that we had been unconsciously ‘balancing the scales’ by following the meanderings of the ‘feminine’ counterpart of our ‘dragon-line’.

The church at St Cleer would have been well worth a detour, though, even without the silent promptings of impulse. It stands on a mound in the centre of the village… always a good sign… and is dedicated to St Clarus, a fairly obscure saint who came to the area to preach Christianity, but was obliged to flee to France. The reason for his flight runs along a theme common to many of the lesser-known saints, many of whom were probably Christianised versions of older local deities. In this case, however… and quite appropriately given our own dance with the masculine and feminine leys… the polarities were reversed and it was the gentleman who was obliged to remove himself after angering a local noblewoman by refusing her advances. This ‘impious and lewd lady’, rebuffed by the saint, set two ruffians to track him down. Following him to his hermitage at Saint-Clair-sur-Epte, they murdered him. As is usual in these particular tales, the saint was beheaded and later hailed as a martyr to chastity.

Continue reading at France & Vincent

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Locked-down and Armed: one man’s struggle with entropy (4) – Push and Twist ~ Steve Tanham

I didn’t set out to have three drills…

The posh one, a nice DIY model from DeWALT, was bought because both the batteries for my previous drill failed at the same time, after lying idle in their case for nearly a year… My fault. So, with lockdown looming, we dashed out to Wickes in Morecambe and got a new one.

(Above: the drill… Mr Versatile)

Portable drills have come a long way from the early ‘Black and Decker’ days. Just pressing the trigger on this one and hearing that incredibly potent zzzsweeeesh gives me a rush. I’m a bit odd, Bernie says. But she loves the results.

Reblogged from Sun in Gemini

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Secrets ~ Cheryl #writephoto

Sandy dregs in rivulet forms

Reaching ever further to enclose the silver liquid

Patterns disturb the glassed water, though

Only the clouds know the secrets held by the dunes.

Reblogged from Cheryl at The Bag Lady

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