It was in a lull on a retreat group recently that I realised I was musing on the spiritual significance of the Northern line at East Finchley. This is where, after twenty-one miles of tunnel, the Tube emerges into daylight: much as a travailing soul find illumination after the long darkness… This blog is intended […]
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What’s wrong with our weather?
This was the title of an enlightening BBC Horizon programme, presented by physicist Helen Czerski and meteorologist John Hammond. It explored the wider reasons for the new challenges in UK weather in recent years, which include more extremes both of prolonged rainfall and very cold winters. Their overall conclusion was that we should expect more […]
FACT! Virgin XC more reliable than DB Intercity Express!!
I travel to Germany by train most years, and this year I finally realised that my major frustrations with Dutsche Bahn are not just bad luck, it really is bad. Online research quickly confirmed this: the average reliability of DB’s ICE (InterCity Express) trains has been around 75% for several years, whereas the recent figure […]
Social Class in the 21st Century by Mike Savage
If you’re wondering what a book on this theme has to do with resilience and wellbeing, read on. The book points out that a new level of snobbery has developed as inequality of various kinds has increased. Class judgements at all levels of society are even more derogatory. And it’s clear that relative position, and […]
Resonate or Rescue: Choose Your Response to the Covid Crisis
I’ve had many feelings about this crisis in the past six months, but two have consistently troubled me. I feel guilty about my relatively privileged and easy situation. And I keep reproaching myself that I should do more to help others who are more severely affected. I try to use painful emotions as fuel to […]
Finding the Gifts in Bewilderment
I invite you to imagine that the bewildering, alarming events of recent weeks, especially coronavirus, have positive aspects which we need to discern: why not try? Like me, you may have attempted to make sense of all this by rational means, and failed. The gifts in bewilderment You may know Einstein’s saying, that a problem […]
From Before to Beyond: exploring the soul’s journey
Life is getting more changeable for most of us. Many of us these days have to face mortality more directly: perhaps because of our own health, or the passing of a friend or family member. Sufi teachings and other traditions urge us to face our dying to enrich our living: by getting through fears and […]
What makes a wild boar wild?
This true tale of animal passion comes from a showpiece of sustainable forestry in the Scots Highlands. Boar and pigs were part of many traditional forestry systems. In this case, the cunning plan was to reintroduce them to help control rampant bracken. At considerable expense, a high wire and low electric fence were erected, enclosing […]
Community Woodlands in Scotland: a tool for social regeneration
Comparing the community woodland sector North and South of the border is sad and striking – from down here. Scotland has over 250 community woodlands, with an umbrella organisation, and national government support. In England, there are a diverse scattering of projects, but some of the big ones (such as Avon) have fizzled out as […]
Cracking resilience problems on Eigg
Eigg is a small island in the Hebrides: five miles by three, with 100 inhabitants. Try adding to your resilience challenges: harsh climate, high transport costs, poor soil, and … a series of despotic landlords. However the gift was in the problem: the despots provoked Eigg’s people into creating the first community land buyout in […]