04/01/2026
It feels like a different kind of darkness this New Year. It falls like a cloak around 4.30pm in the afternoon and that’s it for the next sixteen hours. This isn’t a darkness that street lamps can do much with. It seems to be demanding attention. Seems like you could put your tongue out and taste it. It’s not quite sinister, but down here in the sodden hills of Devon, it’s certainly substantial. Not dappled, not playful, but calling something forth.
I was walking the country lanes a few nights ago and a strange thing happened. It was about five minutes from absolute dark, and I could just about make out the pale track ahead of me. For some reason I stopped, I can’t remember why. From just a foot behind me, I heard a voice.
- How far is it to the red box?
I turned and saw a woman, likely in her late-thirties, in an antique man’s overcoat, slender and with her eyes tight shut. Like she was talking to me from the middle of a dream. She must have been walking silently behind me for some distance.
- Do you mean the phone box?
- Yes.
- I’m not sure if any of them work anymore.
- Oh I think they do. I don’t have a phone but I need a phone.
- Well you’d be looking at about another half mile, just on the corner past the Bay Horse Inn.
She seems almost frozen to the spot, or adrift in some process not available to me. I wonder if she is a faery. She doesn’t want to walk into the town. She wants to stay in the dark. I give her my phone and she slowly dials in a number. She holds the phone to her ear but now her eyes are open and she’s looking directly at me, pained, tired.
- Mum. Me. I have the stranger’s phone.
I know she wants me to bear witness to the moment, so I hold the gaze.
- It can’t be like this anymore mum. Can’t. Look what you’re doing.
Whatever is on the other end speaks for a long time. The girl keeps trying to half-heartedly interrupt. Little sighs.
- Mum, mum, stop mum. The stranger’s phone. I’m going to walk towards you now. Unlock the door.
And with that she stops the call. For another moment she just closes her eyes again, like she’s moaning but can’t be sure. She’s delicately unmoored then returns. She gives my phone back and I realise we’re wearing the same coat. I speak.
- Look after yourself love, God bless you. Happy Boxing Day.
And she’s gone, like she was never there.
So strange, the things life causes us to witness. A Ghost of Christmas Present.
*
What Shape Are You In?
I’ve decided to make the stroll day walks for a little bit now. I attract that other frequency of encounter, and for now I’m putting a prohibition on it. It’s possible to do that. I’m peering into that wintery light hopefully.
Of course, boundaries is all part of the old tradition of ‘beating the bounds’. I’ll come to that in a second.
Right now, these stomps are a big part of every day. I slip into my Levi’s and tweeds, find a scarf, comfortable boots and head out. There’s the thrilling chill of the wind over the fields and the parish bell chiming every now and then. The sky is slate grey, the spidery, leafless trees straight from a fairy tale. It takes about two hours, I never rush. After about ninety minutes the body starts to query quite what is happening, and may start to veer towards home. Mutiny. Keep going my friends. Maybe there’s a pie, or a mug of tea, or even a pint of red beer at the end of it. For me there’s certainly a properly zonked-out nap urging me on.
Here’s a little English history.
Alfred the Great had ‘beating bounds’ mentioned in his laws, and there’s even talk that it was originally formed in a Roman festival called the Terminalia, in deference to Terminus, the god of landmarks. There would be sports and dance at boundary places (star jumps and arm wrestling on the boundary of Buckfast and Buckfastleigh, anyone?) and for anyone less fit you could leather into cakes and wine.
This kind of thing was not unknown to the Norseman who brought their own charmingly Viking variant, and by the time of Henry VIII’s reign it had descended into a rather rowdy ale feast that had gone from ‘solemne and accustomable processions into a right foul and detestable abuse’, (from the mouth of a preacher). Priests used to deliver a divine blessing to encourage the green fuse of the parish harvest, where there may also be fasting, small pilgrimages and particular prayers. To walk the boundaries installed a mental perambulation in your head in a time when maps were scare, and also to check the other village wasn’t taking liberties. The community held a folk memory of the shape, nature and charisma of its parish.
Of course, not all of us can walk. But it can still be a wonder to take an imaginative stroll around the edges of our own character...
Beating The Boundaries Of Ourselves