21 Replies to “Steps to Change”

  1. Yes agree and love nature , the trees the birds and everything else that nature brings. Firstly if people can see that nature belongs to the earth and man.

  2. greenmackenzie – Scotland – Hi, I'm Seonaid, and I share my home on the shores of Loch Ness deep in the Scottish Highlands with my husband, my son and a collection of dogs, hens and a cat. I love art which is here now and gone tomorrow...like food and nature...but also have a passion for vintage and the ancient past! Nature is my favourite muse, with her wild ever shifting seasons. I have been using and teaching mindfulness and relaxation for over 20 years, and have yet to become any sort of expert :-) I'm a Psychotherapist and Cancer Support Specialist in Maggies Highlands
    greenmackenzie says:

    I just love these words😆

  3. 2ndhalfolife – In the second (or really third?) half of my life now. Moving into the more crone stage: out of my head, into my soul. I am revisiting this blog after many years, many life changes and challenges and finding myself surrounding by joy and resilience. Join me for the transformation and transition.
    2ndhalfolife says:

    I had a weird step thing on my property before I moved. It was in my front yard and I could never figure out what it was?? I used it to put interesting rocks and such…….

  4. Michelle Adam – I am a writer, teacher, and lover of the earth. I have written for magazines and newspapers for twenty years, including the Hispanic Outlook in Higher Education Magazine, The World of Hibernia magazine, and Vista magazine, and was a contributing author for The Irish Today, a coffee-table book that sold at major bookstores. I was raised in Spain, Switzerland, and the U.S. by Argentinean and American parents, and have taught Spanish to middle school students for the past ten years. In addition, I’ve worked as a photographer, produced short films, have studied and practiced indigenous and shamanic traditions for a dozen years, and have worked as a healer.
    Michelle Adam says:

    Nice! I love this corner.

  5. Your posts bring a tiny moment of peace and pleasure to each of my days. I look forward to your few, perceptive words which are perfect for each picture. Your attention to detail is reassuring. Thank you!

  6. Joel F – Fashion Accessory and Graphic Designer / Traveler / Chocolate Lover / Life Seeker Joys of Joel Kindly Click / Tap the website link below the Photo Gallery to read the site. Thanks
    Joel F says:

    love this.

  7. I feel a sense of permanence and durability in old stones, as if they hold the stories of our ancestors and, that if we listened closely, we could hear them whisper to us.

    1. flahertylandscape – I like to live landscape stories…I am a landscape architect; and I like to write stories about people, plants, gardens and the landscape.
      flahertylandscape says:

      If the stone talks…do we learn the truth about gnomes…about dwarves…the richness of that history…bound up in the stone? Thank you and ‘leaf and twig’ for the inspiration!

  8. Another new thought: corners sit there and wait. But from the looks of that old rock, they are content in their waiting.

    1. flahertylandscape – I like to live landscape stories…I am a landscape architect; and I like to write stories about people, plants, gardens and the landscape.
      flahertylandscape says:

      I get it, the discovery is always there–waiting for me to make the first move–right? Turning the corner is the discovery.

  9. very good. I believe the only one that said nothing positive to me is the Buddha one. As a Christian it simply did not set well. but the vast number of them really do touch me. And this one did exactly that . Cine see me at Jlehman1945

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