Complete solitude may not be for everyone, but walking the windswept Harris hills by myself gave me the space to contemplate a difficult yearSitting in a remote cabin earlier this year on the Hebridean isle of Harris,...
See moreComplete solitude may not be for everyone, but walking the windswept Harris hills by myself gave me the space to contemplate a difficult year
Sitting in a remote cabin earlier this year on the Hebridean isle of Harris, watching the fishing boats come and go in the little harbour, I felt the fog of the previous months finally beginning to clear. I kept thinking back to a cold November night, returning from Leeds to south London, when I finally admitted to myself that something needed to change.
I was exhausted from the long, frequent and often unrewarding round trips to visit my mum. At her care home in Leeds that autumn day, I had tried the usual tricks to summon a reaction from her – news of the grandkids, or re-reading poems and songs she’d written in her days as a primary school headteacher. But for the most part, she remained still and silent.
Graham Snowdon is the editor of Guardian Weekly
Continue reading...
Complete solitude may not be for everyone, but walking the windswept Harris hills by myself gave me the space to contemplate a difficult yearSitting in a remote cabin earlier this year on the Hebridean isle of Harris,...
See more