DC Metro Labyrinths & Sacred Spaces
Mission

The experience of place can awaken the inner self and strengthen its connection with the outer world. I invite you to join me in exploring the nature of place through tools such as image and labyrinth. 

Links

New! Sue's book about Outlook 2007 programming now available in a Kindle edition.

Brochure for labyrinth walks with Sue Mosher.

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Sunday
Jan312010

A little amateur land-sculpture

Mowing the lawn a few times this year -- a chore previously enjoyed exclusively by my husband, Robert -- gave me a new appreciation for the small bit of land that our house sits on in northern Virginia. I'm not skilled enough with the mower to carve neat patterns in the grass. I'm more tempted to take a tiller, shovel, and hoe to one corner (where the grass hardly grows), terrace it, and put in more stepping stones.

But yesterday's 6" snowfall offered an opportunity to sculpt the back yard on a large scale, with tools that I handle more easily than the mower -- a broom, a dustpan, and my own two feet. The result is a 7-circuit classical labyrinth. I can't wait to walk it under the full moon later tonight.

And what do you know? That unobstructed part of the back yard -- far from the bamboo -- is just about the right size for a labyrinth with 10" path.

My backyard labyrinth in Arlington, VA

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Reader Comments (1)

Nice! I never thought of creating a labyrinth in the snow. Enjoy walking it.

February 1, 2010 | Unregistered CommenterBeth

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