
I hope this helps.
i also am interested in how i can use this more in my everyday life

It's certainly one I think about a lot
So if Awens were a person it would be on my speeddial
But if I walk by some garbage in nature i try to pick whats in my patch and throw it out in the nearest garbage cans, especially the stuff animals get caught in. Or help a bumble bee back outside
I find that those little things really help me feel a connection with nature.



the things you do for nature I also do- without thinking about it so maybe that's a part of it. I guess asking other engergies for guidence or assistance would be benifical- may make things easier when trying to work things out! I got to say I'm very impressed that you can do the OBOD course and a degree at the same time! I'm currently doing a degree but there is no way I could do that and the OBOD course at the same time!Be Curious and open minded, and have questions lots of questions as i feel druidry is about learning and relating to whats around you and how you are part of it all.
Know and be responsible for yourself. This has been my biggest gift from the course so far, leaning about myself and what makes me tick has helped me sooo much and makes it easier to understand why you do things and where you can do better in relation to yourself and others.
Go outside sniff, touch, feel, explore the world, I also like to do my best for the environment by cleaning up rubbish when i can, i've cut down the amount of meat i eat and if i can afford it i buy organic, I also try to avoid buying stuff too.

MistyNightWind wrote:Astrid-
Yes that was very helpfulthe things you do for nature I also do- without thinking about it so maybe that's a part of it. I guess asking other engergies for guidence or assistance would be benifical- may make things easier when trying to work things out! I got to say I'm very impressed that you can do the OBOD course and a degree at the same time! I'm currently doing a degree but there is no way I could do that and the OBOD course at the same time!
here in the exam period I'm on an average og ½-1 gwers per month I think
but for example in a weeks vacation I might do 4 gwers.

FoxPhantom wrote:Well, how I go on is by doing a lot of philosophy. and researching since I don't have the money to start the bardic coarse. and the money transaction is in another currency that I don't know how I can get past that. (since I live in the US)
(Edit: found out how much it cost, for the text, about 300 dollars, which is something I really can not do since I don't get paid that much.)
even though I also draw and play music (on a ocarina) and that also is apart of my life.

MistyNightWind wrote:The thing I was really curious about was the more esoteric practices people do due to naming oneself a Druid or Druid in training etc. Something that brings a sense of magic to a persons life, as many things mentioned here, for one example looking after the environment- although very important and something I always do, for me- I cant say for others- but would do this regardless of whether Druidry was present in my life or not.

Argenta wrote:P.S. From my earlier experiences, I would also say that it isn't (always) about what you do, but why you do certain things, and also how you do them.
For example, I used to hate housework while I considered it divorced from my spiritual and intellectual life. But when I began to use it as a sort of a meditation, and to see it as bringing order and cleanliness into my tiny corner of the universe, it started making more sense, and I can now use it to relax and/or tidy my thoughts as well.
Perhaps that's somewhere in the line of Art's post?

Astrid wrote:The housework thing is true - I use at as a kind of mental space clearing - but probably thats more feng shui than druidry
I just count all these little things as practices which I would not drop because of druidry, but connect them to it, as a personal touch. Does it make any sense? Feel free to correct me.

so have put this to good use by reading about druidry, Celtic, Norse, anglo-saxon mythologies and history to give inspiration for my daily life. Also trying to find ways to express my creative side as i've found the course encourages this which is something anyone can do. I really enjoy cooking and sewing and have explored these and how they can reflect my druid side. Cooking with foods that are in season helps to get in touch with natures cycle and I've made a quilt for my niece to celebrate her arrival in the world and our family, I've done a bit of poetry too and have found it a good method for self expression and to unload emotional burdens too (the good part is no one has to see it but me if i don't want them too). Lots of small little things basically helping you to celebrate and be involved with the world and life that is around you. That's part of what druidry is turning out to be for me


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