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Find the track of a more purpose driven life: https://boydvarty.com/course-listing/track-your-life-online-guided-retreat/
Once in the far north of Kruger national park's pafuri area I found a clear pool of spring water rising out the earth.
I think to know wild water in these times is the kind of thing we have forgotten to even know we want. The way it runs into you full of the codes of the minerals and plants of that place……wild water is full of information that attunes your body with its energy.
I'm going to talk in a very shamanic way about how to get to know a river.
I might say it like this
This was running through my head as the pickup swung through the foothills and climbed the escarpment. As the crow flies the mountains were only 90 km from where I had lived in the tree but by car it was a circuitous 180 km winding drive that took you from 300 meters lowlands up to about 1600 m on the edge of south africa's high plateau.
My destination was my friend's bungalow, a beautiful mountain cabin with no lights and streams full of trout that flowed past it .The landscape around the house is a rugged kind of african Scottish highlands. High ridged terrain with deep vegetative gorges. Unusual birds, eland and mountain reedbuck….and a silence in which a leopard that was never seen slipped past.
That first night in the bungalow the man did not sleep. He was between this world and the next.
Eventually I rose well before dawn, drank a cup of coffee and set off with my friend through the freezing dark for the highest peak.
The summit at dawn was icy with a whipping wind and a thick fog so that one could not see how the land fell to the east calling to the water.
The man came down from that communion with the high peak with stiff legs found a cold mountain pool to swim in.
I tell you these things in these ways as a remedy. I don’t mean to be flowery or poetic but in my time with native people I started to think of the relationship with all things as an exchange of an unseen aliveness. A connected story….like the story of all water… in which you weave yourself into the web of other currents of life. A river, a mountain, a friend.
I could tell you that on the night of the day we submitted we drove up a steep hill with a bag full of beers to watch the sunset.
Leaving that hillside at dusk the man saw a flash of eyes in the headlights.
4-0 out.
Boyd Varty Sacred Sites
Connect with Boyd Varty:
Find out more about Londolozi
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Find the track of a more purpose driven life: https://boydvarty.com/course-listing/track-your-life-online-guided-retreat/
Once in the far north of Kruger national park's pafuri area I found a clear pool of spring water rising out the earth.
I think to know wild water in these times is the kind of thing we have forgotten to even know we want. The way it runs into you full of the codes of the minerals and plants of that place……wild water is full of information that attunes your body with its energy.
I'm going to talk in a very shamanic way about how to get to know a river.
I might say it like this
This was running through my head as the pickup swung through the foothills and climbed the escarpment. As the crow flies the mountains were only 90 km from where I had lived in the tree but by car it was a circuitous 180 km winding drive that took you from 300 meters lowlands up to about 1600 m on the edge of south africa's high plateau.
My destination was my friend's bungalow, a beautiful mountain cabin with no lights and streams full of trout that flowed past it .The landscape around the house is a rugged kind of african Scottish highlands. High ridged terrain with deep vegetative gorges. Unusual birds, eland and mountain reedbuck….and a silence in which a leopard that was never seen slipped past.
That first night in the bungalow the man did not sleep. He was between this world and the next.
Eventually I rose well before dawn, drank a cup of coffee and set off with my friend through the freezing dark for the highest peak.
The summit at dawn was icy with a whipping wind and a thick fog so that one could not see how the land fell to the east calling to the water.
The man came down from that communion with the high peak with stiff legs found a cold mountain pool to swim in.
I tell you these things in these ways as a remedy. I don’t mean to be flowery or poetic but in my time with native people I started to think of the relationship with all things as an exchange of an unseen aliveness. A connected story….like the story of all water… in which you weave yourself into the web of other currents of life. A river, a mountain, a friend.
I could tell you that on the night of the day we submitted we drove up a steep hill with a bag full of beers to watch the sunset.
Leaving that hillside at dusk the man saw a flash of eyes in the headlights.
4-0 out.
Boyd Varty Sacred Sites
Connect with Boyd Varty:
Find out more about Londolozi
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