• About

Letters to Biddy

~ a weekly reflection as a letter to Biddy Early, 19th Century Irish healer from Ennis, County Clare

Letters to Biddy

Tag Archives: Biddy Early

Both Sides Now

19 Saturday Jul 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Biddy Early, both sides now, gratitude, harvest, Joni Mitchell

Dear Biddy

Harvest and gratitude walk hand in hand for me this week.

I entered a room and found old friends and deep roots that I thought were dormant now arrayed with green shoots: each one watered by the kisses and hugs that followed. Being reminded of your tribe, by finding so many in the room where you share a common heritage and have perhaps in some way contributed to each other’s futures, has been a blessing from the week.

,The day ends with a singing Joni Mitchell’s Both Sides Now and the full circle concludes with tears of gratitude that I could experience a harvest on this most amazing of days.Reverberations came from the past and the future in the single moment of the reconnections occurring in the echo chamber. It started on the footpath with a chance encounter of a former colleague with whom I had shared many a laugh, longing and frustration! We worked together in the most challenging of places and like soldiers who can only talk to other soldiers who shared the same trench. We connect at a deep and immediate level as if time has stood still. And then my footsteps take me to the echo chamber itself. A building once at the heart of the financial business of a city long gone where Australia’s most famous cricketer made his living and is now home to the exchange of ideas. My role in this transition, while small, was significant such is the invisibility of a political apparatchik. And then the doors open and the eyes and hearts connect with hugs and more hugs, stories flowing one after another out of every single tea cup and every darting glance around the room. I am moved by so many moments and receive blessings – an introduction to a new face is preceded with a glowing reference; a quick directive is made to embed the future in the next conversation; a death notice from the person I sit alongside of, a high five from a twitter novice I have known for three decades … it goes on and on … a veritable cascade of connections. I am bursting at the seams of the generosity and kindness of memory and echo.

Whatever next steps are taken, I know I take them easily as they land on solid (and sacred) ground and the paths we make we will be making together.

The day ends with a teenager singing Joni Mitchell’s Both Sides Now and the full circle concludes with tears of gratitude that I could experience a harvest on this most amazing of days.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Puddles

12 Saturday Jul 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Biddy Early, puddles, Wellington boots, winter

Wellington Boots

Wellington Boots

Winter brings a mixture of icy stones, fresh air, star filled nights and cuddly moments in front of the fire – all the elements unite. At first glance the earth seems to be in retreat but when the skies open the expansiveness becomes visible as clouds are reflected in the puddles as I get my feet wet. Getting your feet wet is often about having a go, a first try. When winter arrives and I get my first seasonal feet wetting, I wonder what new journey this step is preparing me for. The pilgrim’s job is to keep walking and paying attention to the path, and an invitational puddle deserves attention.

Puddles form because there is a hollow or depression in the surface that allows the water to gather – they capture the offering of the sky and hold that space until the sun evaporates the water, or the earth soaks it up or a person stomps and splashes it around – and sometimes a combination of all those factors.

Puddles are small. Each puddle has its own unique shape. There is a puddle in front of my house, it fills up each day of winter rain. It keeps its shape and everyday offers the invitation: step over or step in. Some days I get myself wet intentionally and other days by accident. When I step into the puddle, I notice my shoe hasn’t been able to resist this element and my foot gets wet. My whole body shudders from the combined effects of the cold, icy and muddy water. Factoring in the puddle, I take extra precautions next time we meet so to avoid this wintry contamination. The puddle has taken me for a fool and when I laugh there is a ripple on the surface smiling back at me.

We all have childhood memories of playing in puddles and the pleasure of jumping and hearing the squelch of mud and splashing our friends dancing around after a shower or even in the pouring rain. Simple pleasures gifted from the sky. I remember a time when the back door of our home housed, in military precision, a battalion of industrial yellow Wellington boots. The laughter of those children (now adults) echoes, as I land my foot in today’s puddle and today’s steps add to the pilgrimage.

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Unearthed stones

05 Saturday Jul 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Biddy Early, camino, David Whyte, Finisterre, Kura Yerlo, pilgrim, The Burren, weasel words

Dear Biddy,

In the introduction to an anthology (The infinite Dirt) I am just published in (very happy to be able to write that) the editors wrote that they had arranged the poems in a way that in a single sitting the reader would be able “to unearth the stones in the pattern we have laid.” And indeed that was true as the a beautiful pattern emerged from the pages that had previously been hidden and the invitation to look once again at other stones in my life making pathways and summoning me to walk in new ways over stones and with a pebble in my shoe as well.

This time last year I had finished a week on The Burren and learnt more about taking baby steps and appreciating the landscape at one with all the elements. With wind and rain and good company, with a lilt in voices around me and an Air in my heart I was blessed by every stone. That landscape that you would have known so well Biddy, blessed and caressed me, held me and pushed me to new places. I am so grateful for those days. Invisible offerings from the visible continue to take hold and unfold.

In the boardroom this week I invoked the phrase from Spanish poet Antonio Machado – ‘se hace camino al andar,’ or ‘you make the way as you go’ – as we set about our work for the future with new leadership, new budget, new plans. I love bringing poetry into decision-making spaces and it is a challenge I am setting myself to do more often, partly inspired by David Whyte’s work mine host in Ireland last year. Poetic language is fresh and wild, leaving spin doctors reeling as they can’t contain the emotive power of poetry that cuts through familiar phrases or weasel words.

Zebra Finch Men's Group - Kura Yerlo

Zebra Finch Men’s Group – Kura Yerlo

The gift of well-chosen words to support your own steps as well as your fellow travellers is one to receive with deep thanks, especially on the days when there are no words adequate to mark the moment. Silence has its place too. In my past week there have been two contrasting moments of endings marked – one with silence and one with words. An Aboriginal elder asked a group of us to be silent for a minute to mark those who had passed through the space we were in. With dignity and the sounds of the waves in the distance, we stood in the soft winter rain in a circle and joined our breaths with the universal one and soaked up the memories and allowed the air to get into our lungs. From there I went with a few others to paint stones. The second moment was a series of stories of past conquests and a public betrayal of peers over champagne and shiraz. The room full of ghosts invoked to score points and to stamp the past passport of all of those gathered to close a chapter. Stories filled both spaces and what was left said and unsaid in both said more than what was unsaid and said.

The patterns emerging from the stones laid and the path I walk contain the stories of those path and yet it is still my path, the one I make by walking it. I have friends walking the camino right now, and for me everyday is the walk of the pilgrim and I travel in great company.

 

 

FINISTERRE

The road in the end taking the path the sun had taken,
into the western sea, and the moon rising behind you
as you stood where ground turned to ocean: no way
to your future now but the way your shadow could take,
walking before you across water, going where shadows go,
no way to make sense of a world that wouldn’t let you pass
except to call an end to the way you had come,
to take out each frayed letter you brought
and light their illumined corners, and to read
them as they drifted through the western light;
to empty your bags; to sort this and to leave that;
to promise what you needed to promise all along,
and to abandon the shoes that had brought you here
right at the water’s edge, not because you had given up
but because now, you would find a different way to tread,
and because, through it all, part of you could still walk on,
no matter how, over the waves.

(c) David Whyte 

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Litany

28 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Biddy Early, Farmers Market, feast, litany, Mary Oliver, pilgrim, slow food

Dear Biddy,

There is a saying in the Slow Food movement that says: Shake the hand that feeds you. It is an invitation to connect with the producers of food in your local region and something I am lucky enough to do every weekend at the Willunga Farmers Market. It is a place that feeds my soul. A cornucopia of Mother Earth’s love harvested and transformed by the work of human hands. It is a weekly blessing in my life.

I am fed in so many other ways too. Connections and conversations rooted in history matched alongside seeds recently scattered on the surface, both landing on the fertility of the space we create together under the canopy of the great southern sky.

This week I have shook many hands that feed me – producers of ideas, distributors of passion, builders of nests, weavers of webs and makers of mulch and muck – all feeding me in their own way. In a logistics chain love dispensing network sometimes you are a supplier and other times a distributor. The karma returns has the capacity to skip a generation too – paying back and paying forward can happen simultaneously. Offspring wear the consequences of being from the same stock.

I will not clean the house while there is love to be made and poems to be read and conversations to be had.

The Slow Food movement links the pleasure of good food with commitment to community and environment, and each time I sit at a table or tablet I am fed one way or another and am in good company.   I prefer real-time table moments to virtual tablet ones but they both serve to nourish me. When I give thanks it seems to be an endless litany. I am grateful for being fed and I am having a feast.

Cape Town Labyrinth

Cape Town Labyrinth

Litany of A Pilgrim

By the ancients                                I am fed

By the babes                                    I am fed

By millennial tweets                         I am fed

By sister sadness                              I am fed

By sister surprise                              I am fed

By invitations                                   I am fed

By salted caramel tarts                     I am fed

By Lucia’s minestrone                       I am fed

By Billy Bragg                                   I am fed

By Bruce Springsteen                       I am fed

By facebook posts                            I am fed

By gentle touch                               I am fed

By mischievous laughter                  I am fed

By Mary Oliver                                 I am fed

By travelling companions                 I am fed

I am fed                                          I am fed

(c) Moira Deslandes, 2014

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

To Solstice

21 Saturday Jun 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Biddy Early, Hubble, solstice, stillpoint, TS Eliot, winter

Dear Biddy,

Today is the winter solstice, from now on every day will get longer and colder. It is a time to go inside, deep, to incubate and hibernate. In the dark spaces of rest and interiority new shoots will form and find their way from the underworld towards the sunlight. The cycle of the seasons are a constant reminder of the great narrative driving our human and planetary story.

I wonder how you marked the winter solstice Biddy? December heralds a time of renewal, where dreams are midwifed to birthed in the spring. A time to bury in the ground what needs to be hidden and decay to feed new life.

I once wrote that I want jonquils planted on my grave as they flower in the winter time and I want my life is a sign of hope. The heady perfume of the jonquils in the garden this time of year forecast the spring long before any other signs.

Showered with beams of light in the smiles and laughter of those I have met on the path between my home, the market and the high street of Willunga this day will keep me warm through the dark and long night. The solstice is a half-way mark in our journey through the tunnel, and at this half-way mark, we can take stock. The word solstice comes from the Latin duet of words – sol meaning sun and sistere meaning to stand still. The experience of time standing still is what the solstice is all about. A time to enter the dark of night and discover what might be in that space.

To echo a recent blog post, I invoke TS Eliot:

At the still point of the turning world. Neither flesh nor fleshless;
Neither from nor towards; at the still point, there the dance is,
But neither arrest nor movement.

This still point may well be the winter solstice – holding the moment where the dance moves crystallise and synthesise – just as the eye of the storm is the quietest place, while all the winds, whirl and swirl around that central fixed point.

In my meditation and yoga practice, thoughts chitter and chatter in my head. I need to adopt a solstice position.

To allow the stillness to come like the sun to shine and stand still for a moment, dispensing light in single beams and to find me stationary soaking up the precious limited light to sustain me through the longest night. To solstice maybe to align with the universe, to stand still long enough to come back into sync with the cycles and the season. A lesson not lost in the hubba bubba that threatens to seduce me to disconnect from the Brother Sun and Sister Moon dance across the sky: I will solstice.

 

M 74, Grand Design, Hubble Telescope

M 74, Grand Design, Hubble Telescope

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Toss and Turn

31 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

acupunture, Biddy Early, David Whyte, pilgrim, worldwork

glitterDear Biddy,

Did you have visitors asking you to interpret their dreams? Maybe people came to you for a potion to help with insomnia so that they could sleep soundly without being disturbed by a banchee? Tossing and turning is usually associated with being worried and maybe you are being woken up for a reason, your inner self giving you a little push or shove to wake you up?

Dream work is food for the soul revealing and inviting me to make true what the unconscious mind has already created. Tossing and turning most nights these past couple of weeks and waking up to find fragments of my dreams floating up for me to grasp a thread or two. Investigating meaning around these glimpses of my inner life (with assistance of a skilled practitioner in worldwork and acupuncture) I seem to be launching into a new phase.

Time to toss and turn – like a salad I am tossing ingredients in my bowl and creating something to get my teeth into and like turning over the compost to get all the microbes turning rubbish into nourishment – I am feeling challenged and excited about what is ahead. With a blow of a breath, perhaps the cosmic energy was blowing a kiss, I am experiencing an initiation and this tells me I have accepted the invitation, although I am still not completely sure to what!  I do know that it is both molecular and galactic.

The pilgrim tosses and turns. Tossing a coat off with a change in the weather, turning an ankle when footing is unstable or stumbling over cobblestones. Tossing in an extra pair of shoes, a few band aids, some remedial herbal treatment to address an aching foot is all part of a pilgrim’s kit. So too is the taking a turn to lead or to follow, share a prayer or light the lamp.

With a cosmic breath, being despatched into an unknown; I am setting out on an unknown course.

My pilgrim’s kit is fully equipped and my journey, while invisible to me, is set. My responsibility is to toss and turn along the way to wander in freedom.

I am travelling in the knowledge and instruction from poet, David Whyte in his poem Everything is Waiting for You. It is nearly a year since I set out on my pilgrimage that took me to a landscape that inspires him and the opportunity to sojourn for a few days in his company.  The photo of David lying on the ledge of the pool (the same one that appears in the headline for this blog) unites the poet and landscape, a holy communion.

Everything is Waiting for You

Your great mistake is to act the drama
as if you were alone. As if life
were a progressive and cunning crime
with no witness to the tiny hidden
transgressions. To feel abandoned is to deny
the intimacy of your surroundings. Surely,
even you, at times, have felt the grand array;
the swelling presence, and the chorus, crowding
out your solo voice You must note
the way the soap dish enables you,
or the window latch grants you freedom.
Alertness is the hidden discipline of familiarity.
The stairs are your mentor of things
to come, the doors have always been there
to frighten you and invite you,
and the tiny speaker in the phone
is your dream-ladder to divinity.

Put down the weight of your aloneness and ease into
the conversation. The kettle is singing
even as it pours you a drink, the cooking pots
have left their arrogant aloofness and
seen the good in you at last. All the birds
and creatures of the world are unutterably themselves.

Everything is waiting for you.

— David Whyte
from Everything is Waiting for You
©2003 Many Rivers Press

Poet's Rest

Poet’s Rest

 

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Emporium Times

24 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Biddy Early, collective, emporium, individual, library, Melbourne

Dear Biddy,

This week many citizens in my country started to make more visible their dissatisfaction in a government less than a year old. (A budget has been delivered and is winging its way to the Senate for passing and new laws are meant to be ready for implementation by July 1.) In the market place, people are marching and in the market, prices are slumping and confidence is falling away. A government elected with a vision to stimulate the economy (it didn’t need to be stimulated) has instead scared consumers.

The Australian government is cloaked in an ideology of economic liberalisation. Where the primary economic unit is no longer a family (as it was in the past iteration) but the individual – further eroding the stock price of We and rising the price of I. Years ago we were reminded us that we live in a society not an economy. It feels like we are on a sinking ship and the cry has gone out “women and children first”; and indeed it will be women and children first to drown, not to survive.

I live in one of the wealthiest most stable countries on earth, and know this time will pass, and it is no more than a first world problem (after all I just missed the Thailand coup by a few weeks) at one level, but deeper in the weave of the fabric of society it is more than just our problem. The biggest cuts in the national budget were in foreign aid – almost 20% of all cuts coming from that line on the ledger – a national disgrace.

When I stood with thousands of other Australians last week who then marched around the country in protest to the budget it helped me feel part of a community again. The ideology of individualism is best countered by visible collective responses. In the stock market of compassion our shares are falling, and the marches helped me see that it is possible to get them rising again. I was marching with the richest people in Australia – rich in empathy, rich in compassion.

Empires Past and Present

Empires Past and Present

Waiting for the march to begin, I stood with thousands of others on the steps of the State Library of Victoria in Melbourne, I mused at the doric columns shielding the repository of knowledge behind the concrete façade. A library is a vital organ for democracy; a place for the collection of ideas and perfect as the gathering place for this protest. A library is the emporium of the thought market.

I wonder Biddy how the contest of ideas played out for you? Your commitment to give without charging for your services would have challenged the local economy and the way other healers had their services compensated. The gifts of whisky, produce and protection from the law were their own reward! Transactions beyond economics will hold us together. The book purchased and delivered as a by-product of a dinner date; the pink champagne consumed as result of a learning encounter; the conversation that yielded empathy and a deeper layer of friendship … all everyday non-economically driven transactions that counteract the idea that it is every man for himself. We are in this together.

These are emporium times – times where us merchants of change and custodians of the idea of the collective are journeying together. And there we all were in front of the State Library of Victoria. No longer is the library a static place, it is on the move in mobile devices, digital search engines and twitter led revolutions. This pilgrim walks a path that others have trod and walks with others on that journey.

Emporium: from Latin, from Greek emporion, from emporos merchant, from poros a journey

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

May the Kindness

17 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Biddy Early, Celtic blessing, cruelty, kindness, May the kindness

Dear Biddy,

Apparently Philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche argued that kindness and love are the “most curative herbs and agents in human intercourse”. Kindness is not a random act, it is a deliberate one. An act that reflects who we are and is an invitation to healing and wholeness. In all the great religions there are stories of the gurus acts of kindness that enable all around the individual act to be bathed in the glow of the encounter. Jesus welcoming the child, the leper, the widow, the sinner in counter-culture to the norms of the day, Buddha soothing the angry elephant springs to mind too. Biddy in your world, kindness from the mystical realm finds it was from the heavens and the underworld on the breath of the wind and the faery dust. Cruelty is the antonym of kindness – the harsh word, the ruthless hand, heartlessness – that brings shadow and darkness. The saying it only takes a candle to light the darkness has always been a favourite of mine, and I think this is the role kindness can play when cruelty starts to make its home and works its way to bring darkness.

Leunig - Kindness

Leunig – Kindness

This week, my country has experienced deep and deliberate acts of cruelty in an ideologically driven economic agenda in public policy. It is heart breaking. The anti-dote is kindness and it must start with me, in the simplest acts. With each act we can build our gross national kindness and light up all the corners until our individual candles overwhelm the darkness causing cruelty to be extinguished.

I had a flu injection this week to protect me agains the disease of winter. Each act of kindness can effectively inoculate against this dreadful season of cruelty I find my country in right now. To be cruel to be kind has no currency for me – there is never a time when cruelty is an act of kindness – and this maxim is a deception and must be resisted!

Every little act of kindness is a gift, a giving away of a droplet of love and like love,  giving kindness away makes the kindness grow. The gifted act is a deposit in the national (and international) Bank of Kindness. It will keep the wolf of cruelty from the door followed swiftly by bankruptcy (which is where my country is dangerously close to being).

So here is an invitation: Take up the noble cause of kindness, it is one of the virtues of chivalry. Our Prime Minister’s re-introduction of knights and dames while an anathema to my republican spirit, if it means that the noble values of the knights are honoured by that same PM that would be a blessing for us all! Then, kindness might find a home on the Hill in Canberra. Instead of waiting for that day to arrive, I will deliberately make deposits into the Kindness Bank for my own well-being in the first instance and, if by chance, an occasional angry elephant is tamed, all the better.

May the Kindness is one of the most beautiful of all the Celtic blessings and I am sure you Biddy would have granted and received this blessing on many occasions. This is a blessing for you the reader and for my country and for all those who has suffering with a dose of cruelty may we all be blessed to give and receive kindness.

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Pas de Deux Pilgrim

10 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

Biddy Early, Desert, Lara Damiani, plains, rains, winter

Dear Biddy,

The benefits of rain on our dry land are always appreciated where I live. Unlike your Emerald Isle, the colour wheel of ochre from rusty reds through to glowing yellows and warm oranges lie in wait to have their cup overflowing with the primary ingredient of life. The landscape somehow still finds a way to be alive. And the colours contrast with one another – I love how they are brought to life on the canvas of the desert and the canvasses in the desert! The Aboriginal artists who share their dreaming and stories in paintings provide some guidance to me to see that is in the landscape that they see – the plants, the animals and the stars.   This week a friend is working on a film in the outback deep in the heart of red sand territory and each day she is treating us with beautiful photos of smiling faces, broken down cars, blue skies and lots of red. She has been sharing the young and old working at their bushcraft and art and through her lens letting us peek into the fullness of creation that the landscape reveals.

The rains sweep away the season and herald the winter and the heaters are on, an extra layer of clothes and the first soups have been made and eaten. A time to turn inwards. Yet all the photos I been seeing from the centre are on the outside, under the sky and the twinkle of the stars are echoed in the gleam of the eyes of the young and old. This is my country – it is an inside outside job and an outside inside one too! To retreat inside is to go outside and let the trees and the moon and the creatures that abound to soak into you. To retreat outside is an inner journey. Both paths the pilgrimage.

Holding the inner and the outer together is a pas de deux for a solo dancer. Unpicking each of the steps that are being taken and watching where I put my feet and my gaze is a journey all of its own. Looking to the sounds of the landscape to provide a melody and to the seasons to provide the rhythm can be fun in the rain as I dash to the car to avoid getting wet or equally walk slowly to have an experience of being saturated. The physical experience of a sore back is invitational equity; to move in a certain way to feel more or less pain will bring a lesson nevertheless.

Alice Springs

Alice Springs

Both the desert and the plain, the winter and the warm, invite and delight.

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...

Fly Past

25 Friday Apr 2014

Posted by Moira Were AM in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

ANZAC, Australia, Biddy Early, flag, Leunig, war

Dear Biddy,

Today my country commemorates the futile slaughter of young men in a foreign land, a huge loss in battle, tactical errors and sheer stupidity, that sent a generation to their deaths. We continue to remember them, now 99 years on.  This same week the Australian government, between forecasts of austerity measures, announced a purchase of 58 fighter jets for $12Billion. The horror of this juxtaposition was eloquently made by Australian national treasure Michael Leunig.

Michael Leunig

Michael Leunig

As in year’s past, I commemorated Anzac Day by going to the Dawn Service in my village of Willunga. This year more people than ever and for the first time a recognition of the Aboriginal soldiers who fought in WW1 and WW2 long before they were granted the vote in 1967 (another travesty).  A young student from the local primary school told the story of a friend of her great grandfather who had fought along side him who was an Aboriginal man with distinguished military service, she was followed by a fellow student who told of his grandfather who was German and lied about his nationality so he could join the armed forces for Australia and serve during WW2.  As the flag moved from being at half mast to being raised towards the end of the ceremony, there were no jet fighter pilots accompanied by a sonic boom, but instead the gentle cooing of doves and as if on cue, accompanied by the morning song of magpies, a flock of birds flew over head.

I was deeply touched by creation having the last word. As dawn broke and the bugle mourned, a glorious day was revealed, with no wind at all. The flag remained unfurled with no billow in its sail.

Victim impact statement.  Silent and still in meditation. Downcast. Weeping.

Flag, Willunga War Memorial, Anzac Day 2014

Flag, Willunga War Memorial, Anzac Day 2014

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn

Like this:

Like Loading...
← Older posts
Newer posts →

Recent Posts

  • Bye, bye Biddy
  • What if
  • Tall Tales
  • Lies, Denial, Truth
  • Bystander in the Herd

Recent Comments

Dancing with Speeche… on Kintsukuroi
Made by Disappointme… on Kintsukuroi
tomwest on Bye, bye Biddy
Lynn on What if
Ellenmary Allen on Lies, Denial, Truth

Archives

  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,103 other subscribers

Recent Posts

  • Bye, bye Biddy
  • What if
  • Tall Tales
  • Lies, Denial, Truth
  • Bystander in the Herd

Recent Comments

Dancing with Speeche… on Kintsukuroi
Made by Disappointme… on Kintsukuroi
tomwest on Bye, bye Biddy
Lynn on What if
Ellenmary Allen on Lies, Denial, Truth

Archives

  • December 2014
  • November 2014
  • October 2014
  • September 2014
  • August 2014
  • July 2014
  • June 2014
  • May 2014
  • April 2014
  • March 2014
  • February 2014
  • January 2014
  • December 2013

Blog Stats

  • 4,501 hits

Blogroll

  • Discuss
  • Get Inspired
  • Get Polling
  • Get Support
  • Learn WordPress.com

Recent Posts

  • Bye, bye Biddy
  • What if
  • Tall Tales
  • Lies, Denial, Truth
  • Bystander in the Herd

RSS Feed

  • RSS - Posts
  • RSS - Comments

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Create a free website or blog at WordPress.com.

Privacy & Cookies: This site uses cookies. By continuing to use this website, you agree to their use.
To find out more, including how to control cookies, see here: Cookie Policy
  • Follow Following
    • Letters to Biddy
    • Join 39 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Letters to Biddy
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d bloggers like this: