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Gentle, perceptive, delightful. Margaret is an artist, healer and Intuitive who has been aware of a mystical connection to nature and the healing capacities of nature since childhood. "Nature has been my dearest friend, my stalwart companion, my inspiration and rueful comforter. I drink her beauty and feed from her energy. I polarise my body between the radiant light of her stars and her rich humus depths. She stills me and centres me and reminds me of my vastness, my wholeness, my capacity to heal. She has been my teacher. She has sent me pink mists and blue moons, rainbow clouds and blue-sky…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Gentle, perceptive, delightful. Margaret is an artist, healer and Intuitive who has been aware of a mystical connection to nature and the healing capacities of nature since childhood. "Nature has been my dearest friend, my stalwart companion, my inspiration and rueful comforter. I drink her beauty and feed from her energy. I polarise my body between the radiant light of her stars and her rich humus depths. She stills me and centres me and reminds me of my vastness, my wholeness, my capacity to heal. She has been my teacher. She has sent me pink mists and blue moons, rainbow clouds and blue-sky rains. She reminds me not to limit my reality; she invites me to enter hers." These pages carry the energy of loving moments shared with the life force and spirit of the natural world. Composed of lyrical prose, precise descriptive passages, and over fifty evocative photographs, they gently guide you to look for the gems embedded in your own experiences with life and nature. They uplift your heart with their beauty, and engage you with the loving intelligence of nature. "To live interwoven, sourcing energy sparks of knowing and healing, integrating all aspects of self, and flowing in and out of the heart beat of life attuned to the divine, this is the gift nature offers us."
Autorenporträt
Margaret Wilhelmina Wilson was an American novelist born on January 16, 1882, in Traer, Iowa. She is best known for her novel "The Able McLaughlins," which earned her the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 1924. Wilson spent much of her life in the United States before moving to Droitwich Spa, United Kingdom, where she passed away on October 6, 1973, at the age of 91. Her literary works reflect her keen observations of human emotion and societal shifts, with a particular focus on family dynamics, war, and the effects of change on individuals and communities. She was married to George Douglas Turner in 1923, with their union lasting until her death. Wilson's writing, though not as widely recognized today, left a mark on the literary landscape, and her work continues to be appreciated for its deep emotional resonance and historical insight. Raised in a small town, she was deeply influenced by rural life and the events of her time, which shaped the themes and characters in her novels.