Blind faith with eyes wide shut
August 30, 2023, 1:36 pm , by Richard Lutz
With closed eyes, Richard Lutz takes a coastal walk
My beach is an empty beach
It’s full of light and weather
It stretches north from the village of Maidens to a lava flow headland called Barwhin Point
It points into the bay. That’s Holy Isle perched on the horizon. It’s a Buddhist retreat.
Sometimes, on this beach, I close my eyes and take a sightless step, then two. And then two more. I wait to smack into a brick wall, a big plate of glass, fall into a sudden chasm or get ravaged by rabid dogs. It never happens. I’m now up to fifty steps walking blind. It’s difficult because the natural response is to keep eyes open. To see what’s around, above and beneath me. It’s our main sense. Without sight, I feel the constant breeze, if not a wind, from the southwest, funnelled between the crescent of the Ayrshire shore and
the mountains of Arran. With eyes shut, there’s the shushing sound of the sea and its sharp tang of salt. And there’s the tetchy cry of an oystercatcher patrolling the shoreline. I know, though walking without eyes, that out in the water a pair of swans paddles in the morning sun and a heron still as a statue, is waiting, waiting, waiting. Gulls and gannets swirl above.
When I open my eyes, I’m at wooden steps heading upwards. They are constantly being repaired as they’re worn by wind, sea and sand.
It leads to a quiet hardscrabble wood that’s pummelled by weather but never defeated. It’s tough, bent by wind, knarled.
And within it, a twisted pine. A pine so whipped by the westerlies that one of its branches has curled around to seek light and air from the shore.
You can only see this radical curve when you approach from the north. It resembles an eye. Here’s a closer look:
Below the tree, back on the beach, a low lying bush blushes with a lilac coloured flower. It’s called sea rocket.
It looks delicate. But it’s as tough as the trees above it. It is salt resistant and withstands temperatures of -23C. It stabilises sand dunes, stops erosion. It’s bitter tasting. But can be used sparsely in salads. Its seeds are borne away by wind and the sea. And its flowers, which decorate coastlines everywhere, can change from lilac to white to purple. If my eyes are not shut on a beach, I’ll always spot sea rocket- a resilient survivor on the world’s shores.
Nick Dent
The beach is out of this world…. what a wonderful place
Tony Fitzpatrick
we used to ‘Blind Walk’ with youth groups where one has open eyes and the other shut… a trust excercise.
Joel G
The interface between the land & the sea always emanates a certain magic to me,
Duke
Thank-you
Duke
John Knox
Great photos
Angela
Beautiful beach, I remember walking along the beach then up through the wood to Culzean Castle. Wonderful day xx
Jimmy
A lyrical piece on your recent Maidens and Culzean meander.
Maria
One day, I hope, one day I’ll walk along that beach and up the steps to the twisted pine.
RSD
Reminds me of “walking meditation” – walking with mindfulness as encouraged by Zen poet/teacher Thich Nhat Hanh and what I need to practice more.
Amy Frost
Wonderful
Bob Prosser
You’re a lucky son of a gun
Mags
aren’t we so lucky with this on our doorstep!
Sandy McNair
😊👍
Jack Brackley
I recognized each of the pictures.
Grace Wilson/ Ayrshire
Almost as if I was there
Diana Ritchie
What lovely pictures to look at over my morning coffee
DC from Dumfries
Nice one
Chris
I really look forward to your walks
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