Epiphany

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Where the Map Begins

This is not
any map you know.
Forget longitude.
Forget latitude.
Do not think
of distances
or of plotting
the most direct route.
Astrolabe, sextant, compass:
these will not help you here.

This is the map
that begins with a star.
This is the chart
that starts with fire,
with blazing,
with an ancient light
that has outlasted
generations, empires,
cultures, wars.

Look starward once,
then look away.
Close your eyes
and see how the map
begins to blossom
behind your lids,
how it constellates,
its lines stretching out
from where you stand.

You cannot see it all,
cannot divine the way
it will turn and spiral,
cannot perceive how
the road you walk
will lead you finally inside,
through the labyrinth
of your own heart
and belly
and lungs.

But step out,
and you will know
what the wise who traveled
this path before you
knew:
the treasure in this map
is buried not at journey’s end
but at its beginning.

(Jan Richardson: Painted Prayer Book)

 

Love not fear

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“In today’s world, hospitality and love are our most formidable weapons against hatred and extremism”

(Justin Wellby, Archbishop of Canterbury in his New Year message)

Maybe these words offer a courageous basis for societal response to the growing refugee crisis as well as an antidote to the fear and suspicion that Islamist extremism seeks to purport.

Night walk

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A wonderful way to spend New Year’s Eve on a night walk through a native wildlife ecosanctuary.

We were privileged to see and hear many day birds as they were coming home to roost. As the night got really dark we spotted glow-worms, giant weta insects, tuatara reptiles and the elusive little spotted kiwi. Could not have asked for more.

A really happy new year to all our followers at canddaway.com

The ‘f’ word

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“I am a feminist because I dislike everything that feminism implies. I desire an end to the whole business, the demands for equality, the suggestion of sex warfare, the very name feminist. I want to be about the work in which my real interests like, the writing of novels and so forth. But while inequality exists, while injustice is done and opportunity denied to the great majority of women, I shall have to be a feminist. And I shan’t be happy till I get . . . a society in which there is no distinction of persons either male or female, but a supreme regard for the importance of the human being. And when that dream is a reality, I will say farewell to feminism, as to any disbanded but victorious army, with honour for its heroes, gratitude for its sacrifice, and profound relief that the hour for its necessity has passed. Winifred Holtby (1898-1935) 

Watching the film Suffragette in a country that gave women the vote in 1893, 35 years before it happened in Great Britain and Northern Ireland, was salutary.

Across the planet we still don’t have parity for women. This is a film to watch.