Sue Vincent of The Daily Echo blog (http://scvincent.com/) agreed to my request for a guest post on the subject of: These Are a Few of My favorite Things. I know you will enjoy this.
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Noelle recently agreed to write a guest post for my blog, and in return, she kindly asked me to reciprocate by sharing a few of my favourite things. This is more difficult than it seems… how do you pick out a handful of favourites from a world full of people and wonders? Leaving people out of the equation entirely seemed the only way forward. I went back to the blog for inspiration and looked at the things that generally make me pick up the pen, because these are the things that always make my heart smile.
No surprise then, that the first ‘thing’ to come to mind was Ani, the accidental dog with a repertoire of expressions worthy of Disney. Technically, she is a Setter/Toller cross, but in fact she is simply unique. I grew up surrounded by dogs. My great grandparents kept a family of Irish Setters and there were always dogs in my life. I had been dogless for a while when my son was attacked; Ani was brought home form a canine rescue as a puppy, with the intention of training her to be an assistance dog. It never happened, although we began her training. My son recovered enough to move into a home of his own and I found myself with a dog. She knows how to ‘clean up’ her tennis balls and toys, but these days her idea of helping is to help herself to any unattended food, including, one year, the Christmas turkey. That was bad enough, but she regularly helps herself to what little dignity I possess and writes her own posts on the blog.
Ani, given both her ancestry and inclination, is a bird dog… and that brings me to the second of my favourite things and one that came as something of a surprise. I am not a bird-watcher as such, but I watch a lot of birds. When I was small, my grandfather always decorated the laburnum tree outside the French windows with food for the birds and it was probably then that I started to learn about them. I always seem to have known the names of our garden birds. Then there were the homing pigeons we kept as I was growing up so I learned a lot about their behaviour and habits, just by helping to look after them. It wasn’t until we moved south, though, and into a region where the red kites fly, that I really began to take notice. Now, the wild birds are as much a part of my day as the dog and my camera is always at hand, home or away, in case I can get ‘that’ shot.
I was born in Yorkshire, in the north of England, but I have moved around quite a lot over the years. Yorkshire and the moors of the north, though, have a very special place in my heart. I think the link with the land goes even deeper than emotion, though. I think it has something to do with resonance and the geology of the place you were born, or came into awareness of your surroundings. Then there are the memories that add their own richness to the mix and for me the most cherished memories of my childhood are the long tramps through the heather with my mother or grandfather, listening to the old tales and legends and learning to read the mysteries in the stones. Such places sing to the soul.
The ancient stones that march across our land were set there by our ancestors around five thousand years ago. There are thousands of circles, standing stones, barrows and cairns…many of them decorated with enigmatic petroglyphs whose meaning we do not know. A lifetime is not long enough to spend amongst them, unravelling their mysteries… and yet, we try. It is the trying, I think, that matters and it is that quest for understanding that forms the backbone of many of the books written with Stuart France.
Books have always been a passion. I cannot remember a time when they were not part of my life. Even before I could read, books were read to me. Stories of ancient myths and legends, stories written by my mother and grandfather, stories of far off times and places. Little wonder then that history has always had a fascination for me and particularly the history of the human search for meaning to ‘life, the universe and everything’. It was from these early tales, I suppose, that my own quest for understanding was born and it has taken me down some strange and wonderful pathways over the years. I remember that one of the first things I learned, very young, was that the butterfly was a symbol of the soul and its journey. These days, that journey occupies most of my time and all of my being as I work with the other directors of the Silent Eye to shape a place where seekers can find companionship on that quest.
But today, it is Ani that has my attention, playing with another of my favourite thing… snowflakes. We are both watching the heavy-laden sky and hoping that the few meandering flakes will fall and settle, then we can go out to play. Thank you, Noelle, for asking me over. It is good to take a moment to appreciate the richness of the world around us and realise just how many ‘favourite things’ we have in our lives.
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About the author:
  Sue Vincent is a Yorkshire born writer, painter and award winning poet. She is also one of the Directors of The Silent Eye, a modern Mystery School. Sue lives in Buckinghamshire, England, having been stranded there due to an unfortunate incident with a pin, a map and a blindfold; a temporary glitch of some twenty years duration. She has a lasting love-affair with the landscape of Albion; that hidden country of the heart that is the backdrop for many of her books, particularly those co-authored with Stuart France. She is currently owned by a small dog who also blogs and who gets all the fan mail.
Links:
Daily Echo Blog: http://scvincent.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/scvincent
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/S-C-Vincent/17967259931?ref=hl
Linkedin: https://uk.linkedin.com/pub/sue-vincent/42/604/41b
Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/0/+SueVincent/posts
Amazon UK: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sue-Vincent/e/B00F2L730W
Amazon US: http://www.amazon.com/Sue-Vincent/e/B00F2L730W
Thank you so much for inviting me over, Noelle 🙂 It really was a good excercise to take some time out to consider some of the things I love and how much joy they bring x
It was an honor to have you! I think I guessed a bunch of your favorite things in advance!
I doubt they would be much of a surprise to most people 🙂
Reblogged this on Sue Vincent's Daily Echo and commented:
Today I am a guest on Sayling Away where Noelle Granger asked me to write about a few of my favourite things…
An enjoyable read. I didn’t know about the ancient stones.
Thanks, Andrew. We spend a lot of time with the stones…there are so many and each of the sites has its own feel and legends. We’ll never work them all out…but we can try and undestand a little.
Oh this is just lovely! Sue is such a star 🙂
Thanks, Lucy 🙂 Mind you, I won’t be doing much shining till I’ve had that second coffee 😉
Ha! I bet you are still a little bit sparkly anyway 😉
Only if I’ve spilled the eyeshadow 😉
She is, isn’t she? Another wonder woman with so many things she does!
I still blush too 😉
Such a similar list I might pen even if I’m such a soft southerner!
Never mind, Geoff…it’s not yor fault 😉 x
Reblogged this on Anita Dawes & Jaye Marie.
Thanks for sharing, Jaye 🙂 x
I loved reading about your favorite things, of course, giving me a glimpse into more of who you are – but the photos were absolutely breathtaking, especially that jewel of a butterfly.
xx,
mgh
Thanks, Madelyn. I should have included my camera in the list 🙂 I never go far without it xx
Perhaps some day I shall take a class in photography. At the risk of sounding like a luddite, my childhood Brownie Hawkeye was probably the last camera I could figure out!
xx,
mgh
I have very little idea about photography in the technical sense..I just point and shoot 🙂 xx
You must have an amazing camera. My sister had a complicated camera that might as well have been a rocket launcher, for all the dials and checks she had to fool with just to take a photo.
xx,
mgh
It is capable of far more than I ask it to do,but it is really straightforward. I’d miss too many pictures if I had to twiddle knobs and dials. 🙂 xx
lol – I tend to miss the moment simply readying a point and shoot.
xx,
mgh
Oh dear 🙂 xx
A lovely post, told with grace and gratitude. That is vintage Sue.
Thank you, Van x
Absolutely! I loved this piece!
🙂
A wonderful happy post that put a smile on my face. 🙂
Then my work is done 🙂 Thanks, Diana 🙂
😀 <3
What a marvellous collection of favourite things. The countryside in Yorkshire looks amazing – I have not been to that part of England but it is on my list of places to go. Ani, of course, is a wonderful companion.
The stone are in Cumbria…the Lake District, and the heather is on the Yorkshire/Derbyshire border… it is very beautiful when the heather is in bloom 🙂
Really lovely personal story about you. I very much enjoyed it. I am glad I am not the ONLY person to have lost a turkey to a pet, except ours was lost to a cat. Seriously. A cat.
A whole turkey???
Ani’s had the ham, the cheese, a side of smoked salmon ..and left me a tennis ball in the fridge to compensate… 😉 x
I had no idea Ani was such an omnivore. All at once?
Oh no, she likes to lull me into a sense of false security betwen raids 😉
Thanks for sharing some of your favorite things, Sue! 🙂
It was a real pleasure to be asked to do so, Bette 🙂
Excellent!
Thanks, Jennie 🙂
You are welcome!
🙂
A lovely, post, Sue. Although I’d guessed your favourite things it was lovely to read about them and the why behind them.
I am so predictable 😉 But it was good to stop and examine the ‘why’ too 🙂
I delight in reading your posts, Sue, and this one is just as perky and captivating as the rest.
<3 <3 <3
Thank you, Tess. <3
You are ever so welcome, Sue. 😉
<3
😉 🙂
This was great fun to read and a lovely feast for the eyes. I think Northern England must be beautiful.
Sue is an enormously popular blogger, isn’t she? I was honored to have her as a guest. Thanks for the repost!
I was honoured to be asked over, Noelle… I don’t get around much 😉
Thanks, Kate,,, I may be a touch biased, but when the heather is in bloom and the mists fill the valleys, the north looks like heaven to me.
Reblogged this on Odyssey of a Novice Writer and commented:
It is always fun to read about fellow bloggers. In this case, Sue Vincent, guesting on Noelle Granger’s blog, shares a few of her favorite things. Enjoy.
Thanks, Kate 🙂
So fantastic to read more about you Sue, and of course, Ani. Great question to post about Noelle. 🙂 x
Thanks, Debby. 🙂 It really is a good question… and makes you stop and think. xx
Yes, it does. And you did a fantastic job. <3
<3 🙂
I don’t know you well, Sue, having only met you once, but if anyone would have asked me what your favourite things are, I would have named all these! You write about them all so beautifully on your blog, they are a part of you. Xxx
Thanks, Ali… I found it difficult to narrow it down, there are so many things I love…and not many I don’t apart from the ones that would send me off on a rant 😉 xx
I’m sure you would be just as eloquent and poetic in a rant as all your other writing. 😊
I’ve written a few 😉 Usually whenthe Happiness Engineers have been playing… 😉 xx
Haha yep! Read those and fully concur!
There are days I dread turning on the PC… 😉
Reblogged this on Viv Drewa – The Owl Lady.
Thank you so much for reblogging this, Viv 🙂 Hugs from me and Ani xx<3
Thanks, Viv!