Copy write Notice

Copyright © 2010 - 2024. All rights reserved. The material on this site: pictures or written material, may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form.


Peace and Blessings on your path.




Monday, May 21, 2018

Labyrinth walk: Sunday June 3, 2018 from 3 to 5 pm at Spanish Banks in Vancouver, BC.




Weather permitting, I will draw a labyrinth and host a 'walk' on Sunday June 3, 2018 from 3 to 5  pm at Spanish Banks in Vancouver.  Please come if you can.

Cost: by donation.

For directions to the labyrinth, cut and paste the following link into your browser:






In the spirit of reciprocity and gratitude, please bring a gift to offer to the Sacred in Nature such as flowers, coffee beans, etc. These will be used to create a mandala in the centre of the labyrinth.


Reminder: 

You may need to cross shallow tide pools to arrive at the labyrinth location, so please come prepared and dress for the weather.

If you have any questions, please email me at:


walkingalabyrinth@gmail.com

I would like to acknowledge and thank the Musqueam, Tsleil-Waututh, and Squamish Nations on whose traditional and unceded territories I draw, work, play and live on.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Followers

Blog Archive

About Me

My photo
Walking a Labyrinth is like accepting an invitation to pray, meditate, contemplate, dream, celebrate or play; a place to find inspiration, satisfy a curiosity, examine metaphor, mythology or simply, a place to explore liminal space: a 'betwixt and between' place. . . Victor W Turner has described liminality as "a fructile chaos, a storehouse of possibilities, not a random assemblage but a striving after new forms and structures, a gestation process." Labyrinths are drawn on the foreshore, betwixt the nearshore and the backshore, between the low and high water marks to present liminal space as a physical location. Labyrinths may also be drawn during liminal time: dusk or dawn and/or solstice or equinox. The flags surrounding the labyrinth are used for a couple reasons: first they help people find the labyrinth at Spanish Banks. Next, they are used to create a natural acoustic environment. This auditory experience or sound scape ecology is intended to alter the perception and/or the perspective of visitors while they are walking the labyrinth. For information please email: walkingalabyrinth@gmail.com