I08; 2010 BS, SB; 2011 IL; 2011 BS
Speakers Corner, 2011So is it possible, as a druid, to focus on the storytelling, the psychology of man... and ignore (or have a lesser concern) with the other aspects?


Aylyn wrote:And we should not forget that ther druid training is focused in three parts: Bard, Ovate and Druid, with emphasis on a different item in each part. Also, I would assume that the druids of old specialized in what was their best field - some would become seers, some politicians, some healers, some bards. Why not follow a similar path for us?
And in general, for the nature part of druidry: I do feel an affinity to nature without which I would be incomplete. That does not mean I want to give up central heating, electrical light and my computer. There are different levels of being close to nature, and everybody should choose the one that suits them best.


"Concern with the environment is no longer one of many "single issues"; it is the context of everything else - our lives, our business, our politics." Fritjof Capra



Frog wrote:We are also exposed to recognise that we don't have dominion over nature, but are indeed part of it.

Sometimes people as me why I live in the city. Don't you like nature? I tell them, for me, the best part of nature is human nature.
Michael Franti
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DaRC wrote:All cities have a nature and nature is within the city, so I would say of course it matters. Often it is nature that is the cause of the city - usually becuase they are powerful places to trade.
Otherwise we'd just have a generic city which at a highly abstracted level we do, but nature is in the details.


Frog wrote:Throughout the OBOD training we are exposed a whole host of ideas, concepts and specialities - the arts, healing, divination, psychology. We are also exposed to recognise that we don't have dominion over nature, but are indeed part of it.
So is it possible, as a druid, to focus on the storytelling, the psychology of man... and ignore (or have a lesser concern) with the other aspects? I recognise here that my involvement with nature isn't as all encompassing as someone who effectively lives in the woods.
For my own part, I would suggest that this is possible as it's just a shift within the scope, but would be interested in other views on this.
I08; 2010 BS, SB; 2011 IL; 2011 BS
Speakers Corner, 2011Frog wrote:So is it possible, as a druid, to focus on the storytelling, the psychology of man... and ignore (or have a lesser concern) with the other aspects? I recognise here that my involvement with nature isn't as all encompassing as someone who effectively lives in the woods.
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