I've been thinking a bit about the concept of Place in Druidry. We always, during ritual, ask for the blessing of the spirit of Place to bless our work. This is feeling more and more significant. Partly because there's so many different kinds of Place.
There's the Place one is in as they mature. There's the Place one is in mentally, spiritually, economically. When someone writes a sad poem they often say they were in a bad place at the time. They don't mean their kitchen table. But then, literally, as well, if we're in the woods doing this ritual we are asking for the blessings on whatever Beings reside in the woods, trees, sprites, animals, fae, humans, etc.
And then.... I've always been trying resolutely and nearly desperately to raise my standard of living. When I was a small child we didn't even have electricity, plumbing....walls.... etc. I had a very unique childhood. I was never ashamed of any of it except the lack of walls. I had blankets and curtains tacked onto the 2x4's that divided the house up into rooms. Then Dad went to College and got a government job so he wouldn't die young, and we had walls. I was quite proud of how much we'd progressed. I went to university, expecting to progress further. I expected to be a big shot at whatever it was I was going to do. And I keep thinking of my attitudes, my illnesses (migraines and IBS) that was undiagnosed for so long is the reason for my failure. But now I'm not so sure. And I keep thinking it's something to do with the fact that I've never known my Place in life. Not just classist - as a Canadian, the class system is something I grew up able to pretend didn't exist because anyone can raise themselves up in Canada. Social mobility, in my mind, was always a given. I was going up the ladder. And I was going to do it myself. But that's always been my focus. Perhaps that's the wrong kind of "knowing my Place".
And then of course there's the Otherworld, which has opened it's gate to me, and I found myself straddling two worlds at Avebury during the Summer Gathering. Being in two Places at once.



