When I started out as a Druid, around twenty years ago, it was all about self improvement. I wanted to learn, and study and grow and be a better and wiser sort of person. I wanted to serve and be useful and for a while I had aspirations to lead and teach.
When you start out on a path, there is of course a lot to learn. That learning process is going to give a person a lot of feelings. Once you’ve got the basics, there are questions about where to go next, how to dig deeper, or whether you move on to some other path in search of new insights and excitement. You go round the wheel of the year again, and again and the learning becomes less dramatic.
Increasingly for me, the idea of following a path is just about ambling around having experiences. I don’t feel like I’m going anywhere, and I’m fine with that. I might be wiser than twenty something me was, but not as bold in many ways. I was more on fire back then and I can’t work out whether this is a middle aged issue or something else. I miss being on fire.
The trouble with being an important Druid is that it doesn’t leave you time for being a Druid. I stuck a toe in the water with that and I did not stay ambitious for very long. The person who leads and teaches and does media work and runs a big Druid order and all of that is at risk if being a full time performer and having very little quiet time for their own spiritual life. Leading a ritual is very different from being in ritual, and I’m not at all sure that’s for me. I also don’t think I’m the only person coming to this conclusion – I see Druid friends adopting parts of the job, but there aren’t any emerging leaders in the way that there used to be, and I suspect that’s a really good thing.
I may be on a journey, but I have no idea where I’m going, and I’m fine with that. I’m sharing things I think are important, but what anyone else does with that is up to them. I’m not claiming any special authority here.
Yesterday it was grey and misty in the hills. Today the sun is out. I show up. I am not called to do anything in particular, and I’m fine with that. I’m here to bring whatever joy, beauty, hope and humour I can, but that’s a considered position, not something I’m claiming divine inspiration for. It is gentler, just being my own small self and not trying to achieve anything specifically.
January 27th, 2022 at 11:11 am
[…] This is a stream of consciousness waffle that fell out of my fingers as I read Nimue’s post on her web site here. […]
January 27th, 2022 at 11:14 am
Mmm, may have riffed on your post this morning…
January 27th, 2022 at 12:23 pm
delighted to have promoted a thing!
January 27th, 2022 at 11:42 am
Sounds a bit like the question of whether it is better to be human-beings or human-doings. I say we need both to feel satisfied, but our current society puts too much emphasis on the doing end of the spectrum, being constantly “productive”.
January 27th, 2022 at 4:40 pm
I feel this a lot too, in my late forties. My soul longs for simple, quiet pleasures: warm tea, communion with my Gods, a bit of gardening when the weather’s nice. I’ve grown increasingly less interested in explanations and words, in “putting things out there” (and I know I contradict myself, as I still blog a little). So many former interests and pulls have been falling away the past few years, but it feels healing and cleansing to me, like a natural shift and not like a loss. Older patterns wash away, leaving the gold.
January 28th, 2022 at 8:50 am
That’s a lovely way of putting it.
January 28th, 2022 at 11:39 pm
[…] this up, thanks to a post by Nimue Brown over on her blog “Druid Life”. That post, titled “Following a spiritual path,” brings a lot of thoughts to mind. Her post had me thinking about my own start down this […]
January 29th, 2022 at 8:18 am
I find there is a difference between those who want to be important and have all the fame associated with, and those who step up to because no one else will.
January 31st, 2022 at 10:23 am
Honestly, I was both in my twenties.