An Invitation to Reflection: The Places We’ve Loved

Spacious Invitations to Explore in a Journal or in Spiritual Direction

A circular labyrinth is carved into green grass, In the foreground is the beginning of the narrow dirt walking path. some fallen leaves in yellow and brown sit on the grass. At the top of the photo there are two brown cabins and a bench.

Photo of the labyrinth at Church of the Holy Spirit in Vashon, WA by Kirsten Harrison

“‘Environments inhabit us,’ Varda said. These places that we take into ourselves and make part of us, so that we’re made of all the places we’ve loved, or of all the places where we’ve changed. We pick up bits and pieces from each of them, and hold them all in ourselves.”

— Lauren Elkin

As You Read the Quote Above, Does a Place Come to Mind — A Place You’ve Loved, A Place You’ve Changed?

  • What are the qualities of that place?

  • As you reflect on this place, what does the memory evoke in you? (a sensation, a feeling, a specific story, a longing, etc.)

  • Does this place call forth something in you that is more difficult to access elsewhere?

  • What do you KNOW when you’re in this place?

Here’s a Reflection on One of My Places

The photo above is one of my places — a labyrinth on the Island where I live — a place I visit to invite my body into what’s stirring in my head and heart.

I was intimidated at first to enter the labyrinth; I had no experience with this spiritual practice. My soul knew I needed it, though, and it called me home to this ground with more heft than my will to resist.

This labyrinth is a path through the grass. It’s green, lush, and muddy in some seasons, yellow and dry in others. On my last visit, it was covered in snow.

The path is only a foot’s width wide. I step in and surrender. Here, prayer looks like being present for each step with full attention.

The inbound journey invites me to notice and name “what is” right now, usually in list format.

The family of trees that encircle this sacred space stand as witnesses to the bodies and souls who have walked this path over time.

Walking this winding path is a homecoming. The trees remember, and they whisper to me of seasons past. Their whispers bypass my head entirely. They land in my heart, sensations rippling out as aliveness that stirs me awake.

So many thresholds have been marked here on this small section of earth.

I’ll think I’m near the center and then — as I round the bend — I realize I am further from the center than I’ve ever been — a metaphor for how life is sometimes.

I don’t worry here. Past, present, and future meet on this ground — perspective and compassion overflow.

In the eye of the labyrinth, I stand on stones that invite me to pause. I let go of what lies behind and before me, look up to the trees and the sky, and spin around. I release today’s heaviness, and my body remembers that what’s released here makes space to get acquainted with another layer of my being.

  • Here, I know that all will be well.

  • Here, I’m reminded that courage will meet me step by step.

  • Here, words of blessing arise and sing over me as I make the outbound journey.

As I hold this place in my awareness, there is warmth in my heart. Recalling the felt sense of being held by this ground, I am more present, more connected now.

Reflecting on Place Calls Me Home

As I write this reflection, I’m reconsidering my plan for today. My first appointment is at 10:30 AM, and it’s only 7:16 AM now. The labyrinth is calling me home, and everything in me is saying YES.

Would you like some company as you attune to your interior life and listen for wisdom? I’d love to hear what’s stirring in you. Kirsten offers spacious accompaniment and trauma-informed spiritual direction (and you can book a free exploration session here).

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Moving Through a Dark Night of the Soul: A Spiritual Director Holds Space for Obscurity

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