
*
The cult of unity on a political level is an idolatrous sham
of the religion of unity and its operation
on the personal and spiritual levels of the human psyche.
*
Continue reading at France & Vincent

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The cult of unity on a political level is an idolatrous sham
of the religion of unity and its operation
on the personal and spiritual levels of the human psyche.
*
Continue reading at France & Vincent
Welcome to the new #writephoto prompt!
For five years, we did not miss a beat, and every week the stories, poems and artwork flew in to be shared here as part of the weekly photo prompt challenge.
That unbroken series of posts came to a halt when I fell seriously ill and felt that I could no longer commit to collating, reblogging and commenting on the very many posts that came in each week.
However, the prompt has been missed and many people have asked if we could start it again, but with a few small differences, in case I am not well enough to set up reblogs and round-up posts.
I can only say, well, okay, we started again last week so let’s see how it goes, for as long as we can 🙂
Please visit last week’s prompt or the round-up post to read all the contributions.
Each week, on a Thursday morning, I will post a photograph from my archive along with a prompt word.
Use the image and prompt as inspiration to create a post on your own blog… poetry, prose, humour… light or dark, whatever you choose, as long as it is fairly family-friendly.
Please LINK BACK to this post, by leaving the URL of your post in the comments so that I know you have posted and so that others can find your work.
Please click their links to visit the blogs of other contributors and take time to read and comment on their work.
The prompt runs from Thursday to Tuesday each week, so please submit your link by midnight (GMT) the following Tuesday (2nd Feb).
Use the #writephoto hashtag in your title so your posts can be found across social media.
There is no word limit and no style requirements, except that your post must take inspiration from the image and/or the prompt word given in the title of this post.
Feel free to use #writephoto logo or include the prompt photo in your post if you wish, or you may replace it with one of your own to illustrate your work.
What’s different?
Not much…
Depending upon how I am feeling, I will still reblog some of the posts as they come in, though not as many as before.
I will also try to maintain a round-up post each week in which I will share a little bit about the previous week’s prompt, though this is the bit with which time and health may interfere, so please ensure you leave your link in the comments!
Regular contributors are also still welcome to come over as my guest and introduce themselves (click here for details).
Please note: As I do not share my political opinions on this blog, please do not use the challenge as a platform from which to share yours. Party political or racially offensive posts will not be reblogged and links will be deleted.
This week’s prompt ~ Guarded

For visually challenged writers, the image shows a pathway through the bracken of the moors towards a distant horizon crowned by a hill. The path is flanked by a huge rock…

Which way leads you home
Backwards to where you began
Or moving onwards
Seeking a new adventure
In the landscape of the heart
*
The photo for this week’s prompt was taken on the moors of Yorkshire, near the Cow and Calf rocks at Ilkley some years ago. A place where part of my heart will always reside.
I liked this particular photo as it is difficult to be sure whether it is a man or a woman, which way they are walking…or what the mood might be. In fact, it was Stuart, looking out from the edge of the moors at dawn, ready to lead the Companions on a workshop weekend.
I am deeply touched by how many of you have immediately picked up the prompt where we left off in September when I fell ill. Thank you to everyone who took part, visited or reblogged the posts or left comments for their authors.
A new prompt will be published later today. I will reblog some of the contributions as they come in… and you can find all the entries on the original prompt post in case I have missed any… or please click on the links below to read them and leave a comment for the author!
Please be aware that because of the change in my health and the demands of treatment, I may not reblog as many posts from each challenge as before and cannot promise a full round-up post every week… though I will do my best.
An invitation to writephoto writers…
As there are usually too many contributions to reblog all of them every week, and so that we can get to know their writers, I would like to invite all writephoto writers to come and introduce themselves on the blog as my guest! Click here for details.
Come and join in!

Please click the links below to read and comment on this week’s contributions!
V. M. Sang at Dragons Rule OK.
Kerfe Roig at K- Lines that Aim to Be
Daisybala at freshdaisiesdotme
Paula Light at Light Motifs II
Deborah at A Wise Woman’s Journey
Trent P. McDonald at Trent’s World
Anita from Anita Dawes and Jaye Marie
Brian F. Kirkham at The Inkwell
Suzette Benjamin at Suzette B’s Blog
Ritu Bhathal at But I Smile Anyway
Alethea Kehas at The Light Behind the Story
Honoré Dupuis at Of Glass and Paper
Fandango at This, That and the Other

Now can desert us
Memories are evergreen
Jewels set in time
*

It had been far too long. Surely, his family assumed he’d died as they hadn’t heard hair nor hide for almost three years. When the plane went down, the wreckage wasn’t discovered for months, and the bodies were burned beyond recognition. But, he survived.
Continue reading at Relax, It’s All Write

International Holocaust Memorial Day
27th January
*
In remembrance of all those men, women and children
whose lives were taken from them
simply for being themselves.
*
The flame symbolises a resolve to stand
against prejudice, hatred and injustice today,
no matter what form it takes.
To learn from the past to create a brighter future
for our children and grandchildren.
*
On 27 January 1945, Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest Nazi concentration and death camp, was liberated. Over a million people had died there, and appallingly, that would come to seem but a drop in the ocean of tragedy that would emerge after the war.
Few are now left who remember first hand…though their children and grandchildren carry their memories and often their scars.
And it did not end there… our world has seen almost constant war ever since. Genocide has continued and millions more have fallen to hatred and violence.
Even on our streets, as we face a common foe at this time with the coronavirus, we still find time for prejudice and distrust… the very ingredients that fuel tragedy.
On this Holocaust Memorial Day, let us be open to learning from the past… and making a difference to the future.
Why do we always seem to head north in dodgy weather? It was in January 2015 that Stuart and I had set off Discovering Albion on a fabulous journey through the landscape. On the way home, we had chosen to spend the day ‘marooned’ on Holy Island while the tide flooded the causeway and cut us off from the mainland.
It would be three years later before we would pass that way again when, with Steve and some of our companions from the Silent Eye, we would spend a weekend workshop exploring the castles that line that particular coastline… and, inevitably, being sidetracked by everything from standing stones to saints.
As the end of that weekend saw us once more on Holy Island, where we were gifted with both the song of the mermaids and an unexpected meeting with the ancestors, I thought this journey, which adds an extra dimension to the one I have just finished sharing, might be the best one to share next as we continue to be stuck in lockdown and unable to travel in person…

We were heading for the Castles of the Mind weekend, so time placed a curtain wall around our freedom to meander. For once, therefore, we behaved, managing to resist all temptation to stop and visit places along the road as we made our way northwards. Our destination was Bamburgh and we had to arrive in time for tea. That we arrived early enough to book in to our accommodation and check out two churches before the meeting was our reward for not straying from the road.

The route we had taken was circuitous, avoiding the rush-hour traffic by the simple expedient of going south in order to head north on calmer routes. Thus, the symbolism of the weekend began early, because although the more direct route would undoubtedly have been quicker, we would have arrived bored by motorways and stressed by traffic, where instead we learned something about the land, found new places to explore and arrived eager to greet our friends, who had travelled from across the country and from the Czech Republic for the weekend. The straight road s not always the best from which to learn.

We would begin with a cream tea and a walk on the beach below Bamburgh’s iconic castle, where Steve would introduce us to some of the concepts he wanted to explore during the course of the weekend, using the symbolism of the castle to illustrate the workings of the ego.

No-one really knows how long there has been a fortress on the site, or whether the striking outcrop on the shore began its life as something other than a defensive bastion. What is known is that it was once a place of the Brittonic Celts, who called it Din Guarie, as early as 420AD. It has been an Anglo Saxon palace, a Norman stronghold and seat of rebellion and is now a private home partly open to the public. The castle has seen many changes over the years, but it still imposes its presence upon the landscape.

Castles are strange, contradictory things, when you think about it. They fulfil many functions, from keeping goods and people sheltered within the safety of their walls, to defending against attack, whilst being themselves both bases for armies and for ruling the surrounding land with the proverbial iron fist. They may epitomise strength, will and power, yet they are also rigid, limited and vulnerable. Under attack they may be broken, under siege they will fall to starvation, flame, or fear. The encircling wall which holds everything within it in safety is also its own boundary, through which both ingress and egress are carefully controlled. The bars of the portcullis can keep people in as well shutting them out.

We stood on the outside, looking in. The gates were closed against us and, in a perfect illustration, we were denied its sanctuary as a sudden squall battered us with wind and rain. Surrounded by the elemental forces of the water and air, it would have been easy to choose a retreat, seeking the shelter of stone walls and firesides.
Continue reading at France & Vincent

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Language is often wiser than both,
it’s vulgar and noble would-be users.
*
The Greek prefix ‘dys’ as in dysfunctional or dystopian,
and the Latin prefix ‘dis’ as in dishonest and dishonourable
Continue reading at France & Vincent

*
From the intuition of ‘oneness’
as the ground and principle of multiplicity
philosophy and natural science derive their source.
*
Continue reading at France & Vincent
Sue is back with her #Writephoto prompt after an enforced break. We are so happy to see you back with your prompt, Sue. Gently does it!
So the prompt is RETURN along with the photo:

The return of normality That's all we seek. The return of affection That's what we need
Continue reading at But I Smile Anyway