Community
Britain is not a land of debt, crime and devastation, but an archipelago of vibrant communities, living histories, strong human kindness and intense natural beauty.
This land is peopled by a welcoming and cheerful people, who are willing to share food and shelter, who are excited about the challenges of the future, and who are very capable of thinking and acting powerfully for themselves.
People are doing great things all over the land, inspiring projects and incredible works. Community is no lost dream but a constant and diverse jewel that sometimes hides itself from the brash outsider, but always reasserts itself in the most subtle and joyous of living ways.
We are all strangers wandering a strange land, ultimately unsure of ourselves or our path. This is what binds us together. A wandering journey is the common metaphor for all humanity on earth. If we can recognize this, and understand the transitional nature of our existence, then perhaps forgiveness and healing become easier to find. We need only to support each others' quests, and trust that despite seeming disharmonies, they all fit together in some (as yet) invisible way that is vast and perfect.
The Wayfarer is an earthworm for static communities, turning and aerating the grassroots of society. Deep cultural memories of nomadism are within all of us, despite today our living mostly static lives, moving quickly back and forth in the same small patterns, from house to car to office to shop and back.
Wayfaring cuts through these cycles, offering a way to re-ascend our ruts. A Wayfarer moves beyond categories of dwelling-place and income-bracket, and erodes such petty ossifying definitions. A Wayfarer might walk beside a Duchess in the morning and a Tramp in the afternoon, and learn and share with each of them.
Wayfaring makes the world safer for everyone. When people travel only by car, community landscapes become hollow, and people within them are isolated and vulnerable. But if more people journey on foot, by street and footpath, the opportunity for harmful activities is greatly reduced. We can protect each other, in the way our species always has done, by actually being there when needed.
Mental Health
Taking control of your body, meeting small everyday challenges and mastering them, is deeply good for our minds. Life as a Wayfarer is simple, but its sense of reward and achievement is large and strong.
Wayfaring blows away the cobwebs of our corridored minds, to offer continuous fresh perspectives. It is harder to dwell in sorrow when you are moving through beauty all the time. The scent of a bluebell wood is potent ancient therapy. Problems that Wayfarers daily face - what to eat, where to sleep, how to stay warm and dry - are so large and vital that our smaller and more complex issues become eclipsed. Nature, with her beautiful basic requirements for life, can help to heal us, by making us pay more attention to what most truly matters.
Blood and Muscle
Walking is proven to reduce stress, and lessen the risk of all sorts of nasty illnesses, and a longer journey on foot intensifies these benefits. You will burn off fat and gain muscle. Your blood will flow more vigorously, and you will feel more alive. Wayfaring is intensively moderate exercise. Your breath, blood and skin know the truth of this. While Wayfaring, you feel more in contact with your body, and you can remember how to trust it more. Wayfaring is what you are made to do, and makes deep physical sense.