England,  History,  Independent travel,  Mystery,  Photography,  Travel Blog

Mystique & Magic In Avalon

The alarm clock is sounding, dragging me out of the vivid dreams which have no doubt been triggered by the need to rise early. Funny, for most of my working life a 5:10 alarm after about five hours’ sleep was the norm for 25 years or more – now, after three years of retirement, 6:30 feels like early morning and there is a glue holding my eyelids in place. 

Cold water on the face, caffeine in the gut, and we’re off. We’re up and about for a reason, not only are we travelling down to our beloved Cornwall for a week, but we’re detouring en route to Glastonbury, just over half way to Padstow, and just maybe a little more than half way to a different planet.

Glastonbury
Glastonbury
Glastonbury church
Glastonbury

All three of my children attended Glastonbury the festival at some point, one of those life experiences which I regret not having had for myself, it’s a kind of missing link in my life story. Still, at least I enjoyed it vicariously through their experiences. I doubt though that any of them saw anything of Glastonbury the town, which is so worthy of a visit regardless of whether or not it’s festival time.

Glastonbury square
Glastonbury

This little town in the Mendip Hills is legendary, mythical, magical…different. Everything about society is shifted just a few sidesteps away from the English normal here, this is where the spiritual hold sway, the myths are believed, the divine lives on. Where everyday life is less important than the soul or the spirit, where the shops are filled with incense sticks, astrological candles, tarot cards, colourful flowing clothing. Ganesh statuettes stare from shelves, ethereal music drifts out of darkened doorways into the outside air, rising toward the sky on the tails of the clouds of cannabis smoke.

Shops in Glastonbury
Incense and herbal remedies

Advertisements for shamanistic studies adorn the walls, leaflets on spiritual wellbeing are handed out on each corner, long hair and psychedelic clothes dominate as people float rather than walk along Glastonbury’s streets, so much so that in our sweatshirts and blue jeans we feel very much the odd ones out. Maybe I should have worn my Haight Ashbury “summer of love” T shirt.

Glastonbury shops
Mystique for sale

There are, naturally, reasons for all of this. Glastonbury is of course a mighty centre of myth and legend, for centuries a spiritual magnet for Pagans and Christians alike, and like so many places rich with legends, the lines between history and fantasy are endearingly blurred. Is this really the Isle of Avalon, where King Arthur is said to have spent his dying days after his last battle?

Are we really standing above an entrance to the unknown, a cave through which there is access to a fairy kingdom where the Lord of the Celtic underworld lives alongside the Cauldron of Rebirth? Is this really the spot where a young Jesus Christ was brought by his uncle as they arrived to engage in trading in tin? Such was the strength of this last legend that it is the basis for William Blake’s “Jerusalem”….

And did those feet, in ancient time, walk upon England’s mountains green…?

Glastonbury
Local charachters

At whatever point myth becomes legend, legend becomes history, you cannot help but be swept along with the spiritual influence, such is the character of this remarkably different little town. One of those places where even the least of spiritual people (us!) can be intrigued and engaged and just start to think, what if…

We pass through Glastonbury with just a few hours to spare but there is something absorbing about its character. We speak of returning when there’s time to climb the Tor, maybe even at the revered summer solstice, learn about shamanism, let those tarot cards be read.

Glastonbury Tor
The famous Glastonbury Tor

But we move on, maybe we’ll return, maybe we won’t, and just three hours later we are looking out across the so familiar sights of Padstow harbour, the lights of Rock reflecting in the estuary, boats bobbing on the darkening water. The warm interior of the pub is calling.

A thought occurs, maybe due to passing through Glastonbury today: if my spirit and soul belongs anywhere, it’s here, in Padstow.

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