A visit to Lancaster Castle - an unusual Christmas family day out |
To those of us living in latitudes that are now entering the bitter depths of winter, with thousands recently stranded in the French Alps due to severe snow and motorists everywhere skidding willy-nilly across sheets of black ice, it can seem counter-intuitive that in four days time the Earth will reach its annual closest point to the Sun on its eternally elliptical orbit. As we imagine with perhaps a twinge of envy the Antipodeans spending their Christmas on the beach throwing prawns on barbecues, there is some potential consolation to be had that on July 4th the Earth will be at its furthest point away from the sun, and so in theory at least southern winters are colder than ours (they get about 6% less solar energy than we do). OK, so this also means their summers are equivalently warmer than ours. Let's drop it.
The cells were pretty spartan. |
The cut-off of December 31st / January 1st as the “end” and “beginning” of years in Western calendars is of course purely arbitrary with no link to anything in nature. Wouldn’t it be more appropriate to begin the year with the shortest day, December 21st (which is also the longest day for you guys living on the south of the equator)? Elect me as your World President and I shall make it happen. Perhaps this single incongruity at the heart of the way we number our days is, on a deeply subconscious level, making us all uncomfortable and - no, hear me out - the root cause of all anger, selfishness, wars, and - oh, you’ve gone.
A week. A fittingly feeble word for a ridiculous concept. A timespan of seven days, whose only rationale is the biblical creation story. I’ve lived through over 2000 of them and am still not sure I like them. From pre-school till retirement, many of us are tied to this repetitive time unit with little hope of escape. Heart attacks are statistically more likely to happen on Monday mornings. (And bizarrely, this continues to be the case even into retirement, one study shows). Perhaps retirees should adopt a new scheme of weeks of random lengths consisting of re-named days (“Golfday”, “FarmersMarketday”,"Feetupday") to combat this dangerous periodic stress on ageing hearts.
Pilsdon continues to keep traditional seven-day weeks. But perhaps as an antidote to such rhythmic cortisol-boosting, it marks each Monday morning at 7.30am with something called a Lectio Divina. This is an ancient method of communal reading of the Scriptures with its roots back in the 3rd century AD. We sit in quietness in the small house chapel for a while, then someone reads the passage selected for the day. We reflect on it in silence for five minutes or so, and then anyone who wishes to speaks out a word or phrase that they felt drawn to. The passage is read a second time, by someone else. Another period of silence, followed by an opportunity for anyone to say out loud their thoughts on the word or phrase that had caught them earlier. No discussion or response is invited or required. Finally the passage is read for a third time, and another period of meditation which is concluded with a chance for people to pray out loud or to affirm some call to action that the passage had led them to.
Cuckoo enjoys her evening snack |
Starting the week this way I find to be a very grounding spiritual activity. The fact that it is done with others is crucial. Sometimes insights are shared that shake me out of my comfort zone. A common seeking of truth from the “Word” seems to engender a sense of togetherness. That phrase which you chose and let swill around your mind for half an hour like a good whisky is apt to keep popping back throughout the day as you scrub the carrots, muck out the cattle shed or gaze into the inky starscape above. Not a bad way to start the seven-day-period.