INTIMATIONS OF RENEWAL
by contemplativeinquiry
I took this picture on the North Somerset coast (UK) last September. It is an autumnal and sunset picture, which paradoxically offers me a vision of renewal. The location is Weston-super-Mare, at the Brean Down end and facing the Island of Steep Holm. It is a place that draws me, and I wrote about it at the time (1).
Elaine and I will be spending time there in September this year, investigating a possible move. We both have reasons for wanting this, and it has been in our minds for awhile. But the uncertainties of Covid-19, its wayward management in England, and our own separate health problems have slowed us down.
I have become unused to moving. On my return to the UK in 2003, I lived in Bristol before coming to Stroud at the end of 2008. By that time I was already familiar with this old Cotswold mill town, more recently the birthplace of Extinction Rebellion.. For many years I was essentially living a Stroud/Bristol life. It hardly felt like moving.
In the new plan, Bristol will still be our city. But I’m a different person now, and the move feels like a major operation. Almost daunting. I feel stable and secure in my current home, and a part of me is tempted to cleave to the apparent stability and security of a familiar property and community.
Another part is concerned with the energetic costs of stagnation. Yesterday I drew the 4 of Cups card from The Duidcraft Tarot (2). I am using the pack as a simple psychic mirror, rather than for classical divination. I draw a card when I feel a need to check-in with the oracle. In this instance, I found myself faced with a jaded youth. I am neither jaded nor a youth, But I do feel as if I have been in Stroud for long enough. I catch myself at times in moods of lassitude and an undefined discontent. I am looking for a different experience, and knowing this helps me to raise my energy levels and recover a willingness to take risks. Writing about it is an energiser.
The risks themselves are modest. Weston is familiar to us and the distance not great. There are shared pragmatic reasons for the choice. Beyond these, we both look forward to open ourselves to the local energy of earth, sea and sky in the liminal space where they meet. I also like the notion of living in the English west country, where I was born, and having the opportunity to re-connect with the psychogeography of the region and in particular its coasts, more deeply.
I vividly remember seeing this solitary crow on last year’s visit. It was busy, head down, making a living on the muddy, still estuarial beach. It was a peaceful moment, framed between sunlight and shade. I stepped into peace myself, better to capture the moment and to avoid disturbing the bird. I felt alive and receptive to the setting, which even then felt like a potential home.
Only time will tell.
(1) https://contemplativeinquiry.blog/2020/09/23/
(2) Philip and Stephanie Carr-Gomm The DruidCraft Tarot: Use the Magic of Wicca and Druidry to Guide Your Life London: Connections, 2004. Illustrated by Will Worthington.
I recognise much of what you reflect on here.
At mid life I made astounding changes to my life – everything I was changed, too big a story to share here but one aspect was seeking new roots rather than uprooting.
I was born in Wiltshire but have spent most of my adult life on the move (first husband armed forces) but in 2011 I began a new journey and have ended up this last 7 years more than 500 miles from my birthplace.
My (2nd) husband and I live in a remote location and have a very quiet life. COVID barely touched us, our lives carried on as usual. We have visited family in the south once in 18 months snd now realise that engaging with the frenetic energies of modern society in a physical sense is utterly draining – we must remain in our peaceful domain.
However I understand your sense of psychogeography – to come to terms with this for myself I made a decision to make my birthplace my burial place… not too soon I hope. ☺️
Many thanks for sharing your story Lynn. It is heartening to read how things worked out for you. I like your sense of “seeking new roots rather than uprooting”.
We are all taking steps closer to home – if you know what I mean. If it feels right then do it.
I agree – and thanks for the encouragement!
Yes, James, moving is a chore, especially as we get older. After 21 years in the same place, we gave away, donated or threw our a roomful of furniture and other items. It is amazing how much we accumulated in 21 years.
Thanks Ron. Elaine and I have begun the same conversation about getting rid of stuff.