Hut Words, Most Promising

I thought of wisdom

I thought of wisdom. The wisdom held in the land and the language of it. A language not spoken in words but in patterns and relations, movements and gestures. To learn the language of birds is not to find syntax and grammar in the fluctuations of their tone. It is to become aware of happenings and connections in the wider field that prompt their behaviour and the sounds they make. Expanding wider, the language of everything is found in the patterns of movement and relationship of the land, the air, the creatures and the plants. Can we learn this wide, wise, unworded saying?

I thought of thinking. Nature is wise but it does not think. The body is wise but it does not think. Thinking is a niche peculiarity of the recent brain. Everything gets by quite fine without it. The body knows the land and the land knows the body, without thinking. Intelligence comes from thinking, but wisdom and deep knowing are independent of thinking.

I thought of Gregory Bateson quoting Pascal saying, “The heart has reasons that the reason knows not of.” The heart makes sense of things in a way that the thinking mind has no access to. Pascal’s statement needs a little explanation. The heart is the body and everything it does outside of thought. It is feelings, sensations, impressions, intuitions and the like. And ‘the reason’ is the rational thinking part of us.

So there are reasons of the heart, the body and the land. And there is the logic and reasoning and intelligence of the rational mind, useful yes, but not as wise as the reasons of the heart … and of the land.

Image mine

Hut Words, Most Promising

Air#2

Air is earth-spin-pulled, strong-wet, around the hut.

Ear-skin moves with the stream-bank wind-Ash-rushing. And the tree-high breath-Great Tit-singing. And the clunks and groans of the hut-wind-dance, giving and bending, metal and wood, in play with the heave and tug of the strong rush.

Eye-grass-patterns, its green brightening, as the over-moving wet-air softens a shifting patch of her sun-cloud-tone.

Everything moves everything. Air is drawn by the pull of moon, rises to the heat of sun, rushes and tumbles over the texture of land. She lays her ever-changing fluid-skin; warm-cold, moist-dry, shadowed-bright, black-blue-white, rushing-still, gentle-harsh; on the open ground.

She is Psyche, Ruach, Prana; but they are not her.

She swirls coolly in the hut, I breathe her in.

Image mine.

Hut Words, Most Promising

The air is grey today

The air is grey today.

High air clouds itself thickly. Uniform. Unchanging. White-grey.

Mid air clings to the dark trees. Hangs there damply. Red-brown. Green-brown. Brown. Grey.

Low air wets the grass. Greying pockets with wetness. Dark green tufts. Light green drifts. Brown smudges. Grey.

Air brings her dampness, greyness and stillness and makes the morning.

And brings a coolness to my skin. A stream breaks from the wind, slips through the open window and eddies in the square space of the hut. She drapes herself over my arms, brushes my face. I breathe her in.

And the trees breathe her too and the grass. And the birds in the woods across from my window. Blue tits chit-chatting. Blackbird singing into the grey. In the grey calmness of the morning no alarm calls here. Just singing, chatting, foraging, yes and breathing the grey air.

And the cars and the lorries, on the distant Chailey road, they breathe air too.

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Photo by Jill Dimond on Unsplash

Most Promising, Short Pieces

Here #2

The shore at dusk is sea-land-skying. The air is wind-tint-dropletting. My skin, my eyes, my ears feel the rush.

To see the place through time is to be blind to the never before moment of the collapse of that chocolate brown surfing into the shingle sloping. The sea knows nothing of a million years as it rises up and casts itself, somehow gently, but with weight ,on the shore.

Nothing has ever been the same as that moment of falling before, and nothing every will be again.

Never before has there been that rush as the sea slips back down into itself, rolling pebbles over pebbles as it goes.

Most Promising, Short Pieces

Here #1

The green lane, passes through the frozen, open fields. The field’s borders are lost in the icy white fog. Sounds have crept away to some secret place, biding their time for some warmer, wetter hour.

Wren darts and busies himself through the dark, damp lattice of the hawthorn bush. “One, and one, and one, and another one”. Though the land seems barren in its coat of ice, there are snacks a plenty for the bright-eyed little brown bird. Ceaselessly he forages, dropping low, close to the ground, then dart, dart, dart, up through the branches, bobbing to stab another hapless bug cradled in the rough bark.

In dusty blue, a solitary figure scrunches its way down the lane slowly, cracking crisp grass, hard water, stiff mud as he goes.

Overhead, geese are on the move. A long V, breaking, shaping, forming. Constant chatter “I’m here, You here? I’m here”Their voices, the sound of their wings, the shape of their flight carry the feel of the salt marshes, the open spaces, the edges of the land. And not just the nearby marshes, but way beyond, far away, over the sea, the icy tundras and rock fields of the north countries. These unseen places echo in their honks, in their formation, in their purposeful path. Somehow their very being speaks of other places, cold, wild and open. And in carrying these echoes they weave them into the land below, the wide flat fields, the tall hedgerows, the woodland islands, the brick-and-flint houses. The land somehow holds those distant places in its field, brought by the passing birds.

This is a place called here.

Wren senses the approaching blue figure. His body responds, no thought here, two dipping swoops and he has passed down the nether side of the hedge, past the figure, unseen. Bluecoat’s eyes are on the geese. Wren returns to foraging, “one, one, another one”.

The oak oaks further up the hedgerow, shaping the gesture she has held for a hundred years or more, standing with still strength, up, up, up into the air, teeming with the life of countless million others. She acts without moving, speaks without sound. If you listen you can hear the language of her silence.

And all around, the presence of the ice. The air has brought her here, laying her gently on everything in the night. Now the day carries the beauty of white frost, the sharpness of breath like a knife, the stillness that wraps everything in its touch.

Bluecoat drinks hot coffee from his flask.

The sun pushes a faint disk through the fog. The fog has retreated to beyond the edge of the green-sown field. Wren still feeds, working back down the hedge now bluecoat has gone. Like a thousand other beings in the green lane, most of whom bluecoat never saw, his moment of alarm is forgotten, his instant of hiding over.

This now is the here of all things alive in the lane, the hedge, the fields, the air.

Most Promising, Short Pieces

The Silence of a Wren

In the biting cold of this December morning. Everything frost-edged and crisp. Mist white, soft grey, screening the south, over the vast flat fields lined with the plantings of white-rimmed winter growing.

I set out to listen, and to notice what I hear. To settle on some single wild thing and know it only with hearing.

Past yesterday’s road kill outside the village church, a sad grey squirrel, much flattened by the frequent passing of cars. And the shimmering sound of the crisp brown leaves of the beech hedge by the road.

I quickly come to my favourite lane – a green lane, untroubled by cars.

I listen. Listen for wild sounds but hear only a generator in farm buildings away in the mist, and the wasp-like buzz of a chain saw. The wild is silent.

The wild is silent, beyond the rare rustle of some small creature in the litter and a solitary bird hissing alarm further down the lane ahead of me. And the silence is the absence of sound, the lack of what I am listening for. There is nothing to hear.

I move down the lane, slowly, in fits and starts. It’s too cold to linger. But I linger anyway. Right cheek tingling in the cold, finger tips numb in gloves that fail to do their job.

Transfixed by the frost. How it dwells so differently on each plant form. Frosting the green leaves of the brambles, highlighting the red of the haw berries, becoming part of the very structure of the thistle heads. I take photos but wonder why. The magic is always lost outside the moment of seeing.

Transfixed by the fog. Is it fog or is it mist? What do those words mean? It seems still and unchanging, but every time I look back to a place that was once just white glow, something has appeared. The broken line of a hedgerow – bushes, trees and gaps. Or the angular lines of a modern farm building unseen before.

I immerse myself in the icy, white glow of the monochrome land around me.

But not much hearing.

Then up ahead, the alarm call of a wren. Aware of me long before I notice him. I find him with my binoculars. His energetic, twitchy movements up through the hawthorn bush. The high churr-churr of his alarm. But the churr-churr comes in bursts. Such a loud, intense sound for a tiny bird. But I know all that. I have watched wrens a thousand times. However as I listen and watch, I hear his silence. The darting movement up through the bush continues. All that tiny energy but in silence. I become transfixed by the contrast. Jerky but stationary on a branch, churr-churr-churr. Then darting upward in silence.

Then a dart across into a clump of frost-starched grasses nearer to me and he disappears. For a long time. In the ice cold I watch. And listen. I know he is there. But the only thing that emanates from the clump is his silence. I become transfixed by it. I know he is there but no leaf shifts. Just the presence of the silence. As I listen it spreads out over the area. A radiant silence. I become intensely aware of the quality of the absence of sound. But not a generalised absence, rather the specific radiance of the silence of that one particular little bird, invisible to me now.

Just for a moment I sense all the other silences in the trees and bushes of the hedgerows that line the green lane.

The wren emerges from the clump. One long swoop to another thorn sapling further up the lane. I raise my binoculars to him as he jerks and bobs on the dark stem. I attune to his silence once again and realise that I am using a sort of heart hearing. Such an unsatisfactory way to name it. But I am inclining more than just my hearing system to pick up the silence of that tiny bird.

And I realise that I am inclining towards the unique silence of that single bird. Yes, with its general wrenliness but also the unrepeatable presence of that one and only creature.

My attention tires in the cold. I sup my hot coffee. And move on. The wren darts away out of my consciousness.

But the world had changed a little.

I start to hear the silence in everything. No longer is silence the absence of sound. No longer is the silence I hear the absence of the sounds I was searching for at the beginning of the lane. I start to suspect that the world is full of endless unique silences. The silence of every being, the silence of every place. All just out of awareness until I tilt my hearing in a certain way and the presence of each silence steps into my experience.

I continue up the lane. I linger in front of each bush and tree in the hedgerow. First, a deep green holly, listening to its silence. Then three young thorns, still in their deer protection sheaths. Then an old twisted oak buried in the hedge. Each one emanates a different feeling of silence. Is the language of a wild thing, in its essence, a soundless sound?

Earlier I had engaged my mind in wanting to fully enter into and name the unique landscape I was walking through. Now I shifted my mode of perception. Listening into the silent presence of the fields, the hedgerows, the big oaks, the white fog, the smudged disk of the sun, the unlooked for crescent moon in the thin blue sky. Not now just the silence of the wren and the holly but of the whole land.

I have always valued, sought to drop into, a sense of arriving, being present in any new place. But, in leading me to follow him into the ice-green grass stand, had that little brown bird, knowingly or unknowingly, led me into a new way of listening, a new way of relating with the more-than-human world. A world that speaks to itself, and to us, as much through silence as through sound.

Wren Image uncredited

Landscape image mine

Most Promising, Short Pieces

The story I am here to write

The story I am here to write is a story of the land and the body, of inner and outer landscapes, of living in flow and ease and beauty. Of Hozho, Tao and Wyrd. I am here to write a story written at the margins of the civilised world, in the liminal space of wild places – Norfolk, Ushant, Lewis. I am here to write the story of the land, with the voices of the more-than-human beings of the land, but also the voices of my own body and the bodies of others – that speak their own language too. I am here to write my story in language that curves round the presence of things, that is a “Saying”, that is Geopoetic, that is sensuous. That is a listening speaking. A language that follows the contours of the land, the contours of the body, the contours of the inner world of image and feeling.