17 Aug 2025, walk at Woolbeding Common

There are a few longer walks, punctuated by pubs, which I have been meaning to do for the 3 months since I moved to West Sussex. When the sun set yesterday, I had every intention of completing one today. Then this morning, when I finished my coffee and hung up my call with my mum, I couldn’t face a pub visit alone. It would remind me too much of S, who is not here with me, taking the walk at my side.

Instead I drove up to Marsh car park on Linch Road, where I had previously tried to go for a walk, became lost, and was soaked by an unexpected shower. I had given up on the second half of that walk at the time, so I headed out to finish it. A climb up through Woolbeding Common, suffering awfully from bracken and gorse, to Older Hill. 

I do not move with speed. I have my binoculars and my plant identification app, and I stop all the time. I stand under the trees, staring up, trying to spot the tiny birds calling among the leaves. I dedicated at least ten minutes to trying to catch a glimpse of goldcrests north of the lane. My RSPB book tells me they are the smallest British bird at only 6.5g, and that gets me interested when previously I have paid very little attention.

There is a lot I have learnt over these 3 months working in conservation and land management. I could recognise Woolbeding Common for what it was – heathland left to ruin. There are spaces where bracken has been cleared, so efforts are being made to give the other fauna space to breathe. There was heather breaking through at the base of 6 foot gorse and young deciduous trees. Bilberry was present in scraps of woodland. I would love to see the area reclaimed for heath species, but posters pinned near the car park show that not all locals support the National Trust’s approach.

I stopped on the Common and spent some time watching linnets in a tall silver birch, their distinctive call reaching all around me. The male’s rose blush plumage gave him the appearance of a reddened leaf among the foliage.

I used my illustrated book of West Sussex walks and the OS Maps app to navigate to the top of Older Hill. At this point, I had drained most of my battery, so took a simple route back down via the lane. It was on this return journey that I finally had a thought worth noting. I was waiting for a turn off the lane through woodland which I had taken in reverse on my way up. I kept expecting it, kept finding it was not there, and wondering if I had somehow missed it. I had to be patient, trust the map, and trust my memory of the map, knowing it would appear in time.

Footpaths like these have been present for many years; walked by many people. I was alone today, and saw no one else on this section of my walk, but I knew I was not the first to walk it and I wouldn’t be the last. I had an idea of the path in mind when I first saw the map, but it took much longer to reach it than I had expected. I told myself to trust that I would find it where it was supposed to be, and I did. Sometimes the way we want to follow is further away than we believe it should be. All we can do is keep going, and it will arrive.

The trust I have in myself is faltering but I keep offering it. I can accept that I can and do make mistakes, I can laugh at myself. I have built this strength over recent years, following the line between taking my life seriously and myself lightly. This is something which really bloomed with S because he loved me without putting me on a pedestal. I could be wrong, make foolish comments or mistakes, and we would laugh together. I was safe to be imperfect, safe to not know–to be learning–and there was no irritation or cruelty or arrogance. It has done me so much good, although I still have a long way to go.

Turning 27 and feeling lost

I wrote this last week and, true to my current form, I didn’t finish it and didn’t post it. I thought I would share it now because I think it is worth sharing even in this form. It’s reactive and petulant and unfinished, but sometimes so am I and so are you, so here it is.

I turned 27 this month and it hasn’t answered any questions. It’s almost as if everything is the same.

Continue reading “Turning 27 and feeling lost”

Update and general thoughts/mood

I didn’t mean to start this entry so downbeat. That is what I wrote when I first started this paragraph, which was originally three paragraphs below where it is now. I have moved it up to get some good news out first, because there is a lot of goodness and a lot for me to be grateful about at the moment. For one thing, A year on the back of an envelope sold out all 10 copies in Mockingbird Gifts in Abergavenny, and also sold out 6 copies in Crickhowell Resource & Information Centre before being restocked and selling another 2 so far (as of 24 December when I visited). That is 18 copies in total, sold to people I don’t know without me there to market it! A big deal for me and I’m really grateful to those two local shops for taking a small stock on.

Continue reading “Update and general thoughts/mood”

poem: Green Man

Green Man

Dyn Gwyrdd yn y mynyddoedd;
Green Man in the mountains.
He sat smiling, holding our secrets,
While we lazed and stretched under the trees.
Among the hills in burning sun or lashing rain—
We drank beer and danced all the same.

Heaving hive of colours, bright.
Tie dye shorts, pink fishnet tights,
Patterned ponchos and fairy lights.
Long fluttering skirts, mud-deep boots,
Bucket hats and unkempt hairdos.
Hips unstill, hands stretched high,
Closed eyes, delight, as bass hummed
Through our chests, our minds.
Four days of sanctuary, of joy untimed,
Then Green Man burned and we returned
To our lives.

To a world with different rules
Of what counts as sleeping or as clean shoes.
After two years of silence, alone at home,
We each rediscovered scraps of our souls 
Swaying in the mountains among twilight shoals
Of silhouettes we did not know.

Print copies abound, I can feel myself growing…

Print copies of A year on the back of an envelope have now been around since mid-August. I’m really excited to have sold some copies online via the website and in person to friends. There are also 16 copies available in shops so far — six in Crickhowell Resource & Information Centre and ten in Mockingbird Gifts, Abergavenny! The book is local interest and it is so lovely to have that confidence from independent retailers in the area.

A year on the back on an envelope printed copy
Continue reading “Print copies abound, I can feel myself growing…”

Sneak peak inside ‘A year on the back of an envelope’

Some pre-orders for ‘A year on the back of an envelope’ have started to trickle in, so I thought now would be a good time to share one of the 19 poems in the collection. An extract from ‘February flood’ is sampled on the back cover of the book so it seems the most obvious choice! For those familiar with my previous work, I also think it shows the development in style and content matter in these new poems.

Continue reading “Sneak peak inside ‘A year on the back of an envelope’”