![]() ![]() ![]() It would have been a sympathetic read based on that thread alone, but the reason I felt Sharon had written this book for me in particular was the weaving together of the Celtic themes and the importance she places on being rooted in the right place. ![]() Perhaps because Sharon’s experiences mirror many of my own the acceptance of a career based on masculine values, the increasing difficulty of riding the gulf between those values and my gut/heart intuition, the sharp sting of a crisis and realisation that change was essential. ![]() It is a journey in its fullest sense.īut for me it was no passive read. So, if you haven’t read it yourself, this is the weaving together by Sharon Blackie of her story – her history, with the powerful threads of Celtic myth, and a cry for the active re-establishment of the balance between masculine and feminine values and energies for the health of the planet. Reading it was such an immersive experience, I’m going to try to talk just a little about the feelings and questions reading it has raised in me. You might well have noticed however, that I don’t very often return to review the books I’ve read.īut last week I read ‘If Women Rose Rooted’ by Sharon Blackie and it was one of those rare times when I felt as if by some means of synchronicity, the right book reached me at exactly the right moment. Along with many of you, I’m something of a bookaholic – occasionally I write here about the latest stash waiting to be devoured (indeed as luck would have it, the previous post was just such a one). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |