Blog Archives

3 excellent books to read, to explore a nature-inspired mindset

There is a foreign land where structure, goals / outcomes, reward / punishment, measurement / return, personal development and laser-focus give way to less precise things like spontaneity, irreverence, beauty, surprise and playfulness.

Read more ›

Tags: , , , ,

Life-changing decisions

I was recently on a podcast, which was billed as “How to make a life-changing decision”.
Big stuff like Purpose and Meaning… but how in practice do we even approach and explore these concepts?
If you’re interested in having a look at where we went with it, then here’s a link:
https://www.crowdcast.io/e/bigdecisions

The David Whyte poem that features towards the end is called “

Read more ›



So many Global Issues – how can one person respond to them all?

Whether we like it or not, we are all being called on to bring visibility to how we act, and, through those actions, to the systems we are promoting.  When on a highway to destruction, it’s a good idea to step off it… but it’s not so easy.  Where to go instead?

Read more ›



Buds: a winter nature connection hack

A lot of people seem to want to experience better “nature connection”, perhaps in order to feel a little less stressed or insane, or because they are worried about climate catastrophe.  Quite right; this is a good urge.  But it’s just as usual to be too busy to act on it much;

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , ,

Less appy, more happy

This is a poem I wrote when I replaced my smartphone for an old-skool phone a few years ago after a moment of clarity, when I was out for a nice jog, of how ridiculous and sad it was that I was beholden to an irritating little machine rather than just enjoying the joggy feeling.

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , , , ,

All-male events

Are single-sex groups a healthy thing?  And how helpful is it to use male language and imagery with groups of young men?

In a culture that often carries unpleasant whiffs of male-centredness and male-identification (and where many believe that oppression of women is the very nature of the system),

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

When the wind blows

It is winter, the dormant season for plants (above ground at least) – it’s the time to plant your trees. What I find interesting is that if you plant your healthy young sapling and help it to stay upright with a big stout stake and strong straps, then it is unlikely that it will grow into a mature tree;

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

The woods and the womb

This is something I find I hear a lot:

“Wow – you own a wood!  Are you going to build a cabin?’

I own a wood.  It is great.  It is sunny, rainy or cloudy in the daytime, dark in the nighttime if there aren’t any moonbeams,

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Surviving the mainstream’s extremes

Here’s a second pattern that I’ve noticed during my time as a bushcraft instructor:

“My son isn’t keen on the outdoors – he’s just not the gnarly ‘survival’ type”

Machismo did not die after the 1980s, it just got clever.  One trick it performed was to elevate itself into pseudo-aspirational but unattainable places. 

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Little consolation from the console

I have spent a lot of time in the outdoors with adults and kids, often with teenage lads on a string of 3-day outings together, in undomesticated environments like woods, moors and rivers.  One lad recently pointed out to me that, out of the last 18 months, cumulatively he had spent an entire month with me,

Read more ›

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

THIS SIGN-UP THING IS CURRENTLY NOT WORKING. EMAIL ME INSTEAD!

Or follow using these

Get Updates by RSS

Archives

Categories

Top