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gawanmac 🇵🇸
@gawanmac
'that we are each other’s harvest: we are each other’s business: we are each other’s magnitude and bond.'
Scotland
Joined February 2010
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    I saw this on an OS map and couldn't not investigate. A place of worship symbol in the middle of bloody nowhere on the edge of a wood. It was a foggy, atmospheric day up on the North Downs, so I decided to walk three sides of a square through the wood to reach it.
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    Haaretz has published (in Hebrew, not English) an incomprehensibly vile article in the style of a lifestyle cooking feature, about Israel's soldiers finding and cooking with ingredients in the kitchens of Gazans who had to flee their homes and are now starving.
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    This is a thread about what my friend found in her attic. #LGBThistory
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    Two pairs of beeches waltzed with each other alongside the track, as two birches stood by, waiting for their chance to cut in.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    I find it hard to state this without hugging myself and clapping my hands in childish glee, but this church has no electricity and is still lit by working gas lamps.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    The colours were not only literal. I am not a Christian, but so much about this gorgeous, humble, magical little church spoke to me. It's part of the Green Christian movement, and manages its churchyard for wildlife. 'Caring for God's Acre'.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    So that is why I’ve made a website - paudspins.wordpress.com - where you can browse all of the badges, and if they evoke memories and stories for you, you are warmly invited to comment there or send a message.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    It's also part of the Small Pilgrim Places Network - a smattering of places across the country that allow "pondering, breathing, meditating, praying and 'being'". They should be places off the map that don't draw crowds. They may be churches, gardens, ruins, wells, open spaces.
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    I'm not a believer in heaven, but I appreciate the notion of places where other forms of reality become tangible, where past and present interlace. This place is certainly one, helped by the apparent merging of this ancient human structure with the woodland crowding close.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    The caption for the first photo in the tweet above is: "First shift is fighting, the second is in the kitchen." The picture of a starving Palestinian child is NOT in the article, If you can stomach it, what follows is an account of this breathtakingly crass article,translated.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    It wasn't the heap of stones I'd half expected, but a tiny, living church that seemed to transpirate from the wood that it was nested in.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    Just the suggestion of a gable, an echo of a spire, materialising surely with each step forward.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    But it was held at bay by the colours inside.
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    Replying to @gawanmac
    Thanks for joining me for my walk. If you'd like to visit the church, this is it, St Margaret's at Wychling, up on the North Downs between Doddington and Lenham. If you go, give them a penny or two towards funding new seats that are easier to wipe the bat poo from.