Beyond The View is a pilgrimage through nature, providing reflection and insight on how to ‘see beyond the view’ – to connect with all things at the deepest level, aware that everything is connected to everything else.
It is a mystical book that combines evocative photographs of wild nature with prose, poetry and personal story. The book follows the author’s own journey through mountains, rivers, desert, rainforest, coast and sky; not only contemplating big landscapes, but also the small, infinitely fascinating detail that can be found in nature. It is a work of beauty that seeks to connect at the level of the soul.
250 pages, 30cm x 30 cm, Hardback.
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Setting out with a mindset that you will see something new or in some way remarkable, makes it more likely that this will happen.
Let yourself be instinctive and discover the freedom of following your nose, permitting yourself to respond to your curiosity and the call of the wild.
Seeing beyond the view is not just about sight. It’s also about using all your senses to be fully immersed in nature, noticing how your emotions are influenced.
As its name suggests, this is a blessing for the start of the day. The essence of the poem is that all of nature is good, whatever the day brings, and can bless us if we accept it as such.
This is a poem about freedom – the freedom to be in nature. It is a blessing of release from the treadmill and demands of life, seeing nature as a sanctuary.
Midsummer is a time of favour, light and life. This blessing celebrates this time of flourishing and draws on the peace of sitting beside the river on a balmy summer’s evening.
Names are important. In the landscape, names are part of the culture, representing part of local history and with a meaning that sum up the character of the place – Lakeland names like Lingmoor (heather moor), Langstrath (long valley), Sleddale (flat or even valley), Great Gable (gable on a roof top).
13.75 billion years ago light emerged from the dark which the Greeks knew as ‘chaos’. All the ingredients required to build hundreds of billions of galaxies were contained in matter far smaller than a single atom. Matter was not flung into an empty void, but all of space-time came into being everywhere at once, born infinite but unimaginably squashed.
Life is made up of rhythms. There is an innate, primal connection between the rhythms of the sun and the rhythms of the soul. People of many religions and none understand that the movement of the sun and moon profoundly affect us on earth. Our calendars, weeks, seasons and festivals are shaped by these rhythms.