Category: Chronicle

A timeline of truth. Every entry, in date order—dreams, memories, moments, and meaning. Track the unfolding, the patterns, the pivots. This is the whole thread, stitched one day at a time.

  • The Attic, the Shite, and the Kettle

    The Attic, the Shite, and the Kettle

    The Dream

    Trying to get into the attic—
    but the room was upside down.
    I had to squeeze in under the sagging ceiling,
    but it scraped my back,
    and I was naked.

    When I came downstairs,
    the party had started.
    The house was a mess.
    The floor was covered in shite.

    I shouted at everyone:
    “Get out!”

    I wanted to boil the kettle,
    but something was wrong.
    I traced the cord back
    to the plug in the wall—
    it was behind the cabinet.

    I dragged the cabinet away from the wall,
    furious.

    I noticed people had bought me presents—
    lots of plants,
    and terracotta pots.

    I could feel the rough unglazed clay
    through the wrapping paper.

    The Meaning

    attic
    A higher space containing insight and memory.
    Accessing that part of me is disorienting and painful.
    I’m trying to rise, but the structure won’t let me.

    party
    Everything’s already in motion.
    I didn’t set the tone, but I’m left to clean it.
    No more tolerating the shit other people drag in.

    kettle
    I want to restore comfort, warmth, nourishment.
    The power is blocked—hidden behind heavy furniture.
    It’s labour to get to the source. And I’m furious.

    gifts
    Amidst the wreck there are signs of care.
    Practical, earthy, rooted things.
    The clay is rough—unglazed.
    This is growth that comes with grit.

    What Lingers…

    What if access to insight requires discomfort?

    What if grounded growth comes wrapped in grit, not ease?


    Marginalia

    This dream belongs to a theme of unearthing secrets and facing what’s uncomfortable, echoing The Body in the Greenhouse and The House That Contains Everything. But here, there’s a pivot: before, I stood alone in the work. Now, there are signs—and with them, an acceptance of nurture from others. In waking life, I’m on holiday, enjoying life with my family.

  • Ansuz, Laguz and Rahu

    Ansuz, Laguz and Rahu

    The Dream

    Camping.
    A muddy field,
    I lay out two picnic blankets.

    I watch—
    an immaculately dressed woman
    lays her blanket
    on the ground.

    I wonder:
    Will she get muddy?

    I turn around.
    My partner has rolled
    onto one of the blankets,
    stood up,
    ran backwards,
    and then forwards
    onto the other—
    he leaves a trail
    of footprints.

    I wake myself up,
    shouting at him.

    A girl sets up a stall.
    We’re at a public event.
    She’s young.
    I admire her bravery.

    I finger through her trinkets—
    children’s toys…
    I used to sell those
    in a past life.

    On a bus,
    I help a boy—
    he’d been injured.

    I’m also a child now.

    I recount how I’d fancied him
    for years—
    he’s never noticed me.

    My friend wants to speak
    with him and his friend,
    but I have no interest
    in chasing his affections now.

    When I finally wake,
    I have two symbols in my mind.

    I scribble them down
    and put the photo into OpenAI
    for it to find them:

    Ansuz and Rahu
    or in Western tradition,
    The North Node.

    But Ansuz has a third prong,
    which AI suggests is perhaps a bindrune.
    On its own, the other rune is Laguz.

    The Meaning

    muddy blankets
    I’m trying to create space in a mess.
    I wake, shouting.
    This is about space being violated.
    I’m protecting boundaries
    while others clumsily crash on.

    woman
    I wonder if she’ll get muddy—
    but really, I’m looking to her to find out:
    How does she stay clean?
    This is the part of me that wants
    to move through mess
    without absorbing it.

    girl
    I see my past self in her,
    but from a place of gentle recognition,
    not regret.
    She’s starting something
    I once survived.

    boy
    I’m helping someone who never saw me,
    who I used to long for.
    Now?
    I’m not chasing.
    I’ve grown past the need to be chosen.

    The Symbols

    Ansuz: inspiration, transmission, divine voice.
    Laguz: water, emotions, intuition, depth, flow.
    Rahu/North Node: soul’s destiny, karmic direction.

    Together? A holy triad.
    I’m being told—clearly, cosmically:
    Listen.

    This is not random.
    Your path, your emotions, your dreams—
    they are one system.

    Stop second-guessing.
    The messages are coming through.
    And they’re meant for you.

    What Lingers…

    What if messages aren’t metaphor,
    but a map—pointing to what’s already known deep down?

    What if growth isn’t about staying clean,
    but learning how to move through mud with meaning?


    Marginalia

    In waking life, I was trying to understand how my ancestral, dream, and herbal work connected. I didn’t have a clear map or plan—just a hunch, and then this dream, among others like The Room Behind the Wallpaper, and The House That Contains Everything, kept nudging me forward. However unusual it seemed, I went with it, trusting it would all make sense in time.

  • Baked In

    Baked In

    Toned, tanned, and virile.
    I shouldn’t be curious—
    but I am.

    His beau,
    a beauty,
    at least ten years
    his senior—
    this I know.

    Their proximity,
    aflame.
    A new relationship,
    I’m sure.

    Her teen daughter,
    an apparition—
    disinterested,
    yet she endures.

    I’m supposed
    to lament her—
    this, my culture demands.

    But instead
    I salute her defiance,
    while my baked-in hypocrisy
    scalds.

    Will I ever
    scrape my pan clean?
    My eyes sting
    with its fetid stench.

    Meanwhile, I wonder—
    is he well-behaved?
    Does he allow forgiveness
    for millennia
    of harm?

    Subconsciously,
    she mirrors
    my position
    in her chair.

    The cords of sisterhood—
    engineered to be,
    and to remain,
    threadbare.

    My guilty interest wraps
    around their air like fog.

    Why shouldn’t she enjoy
    the last of her bodily wealth,
    as the sunset of
    my own populative use
    draws to its final ebb?

    To her, a toast—
    and to all those women
    who courageously scalpel
    themselves into being,

    a life
    the present hasn’t yet woven
    and the past
    viciously disallowed.

  • Amphitrite Rides the Hippocamp

    Amphitrite Rides the Hippocamp

    Amphitrite rides the hippocamp.
    Her face—
    emotionless.
    Her spirit—
    silent and still.

    She is well-versed in battle.
    Her sea-beaten face shows
    she has slept with happiness,
    as she has worn sorrow.

    Her hippocamp moves
    between her thighs
    with purpose.
    His intent is smooth
    beneath the water.

    He carries his maiden
    with loyal
    and tender care.

    She grasps, gingerly,
    to his back.
    It’s been a while.

    Is it uncertainty,
    or is it inexperience?
    I cannot tell—

    as the two
    octogenarians
    glide softly across
    the hotel pool.

  • Competence vs. Compassion

    Competence vs. Compassion

    The Dream

    Herb School.
    The teacher got the wrong impression of me.
    I confronted them—
    their bias couldn’t sit.

    Shouting at my son,
    I was trying to get him ready.
    We were going to be late.
    That would be another thing
    against me.

    The Meaning

    teacher
    Profiled before.
    It’s happening again.
    But this time, I don’t absorb it.
    I push back.
    That’s new.

    rush
    I’m not just late—
    I’m being watched.
    Every stumble, another mark.
    I snap at my son,
    trying to prove I’m competent.
    At his expense.

    Old stories and shame cycles are replaying, but this time I’m doing something different. I’m calling it out and noticing my behaviour for what it is. Internalised perfectionism and desire to be seen for who I am, not for others’ projections.

    What Lingers…

    What if pushing back is progress— even when the system still keeps score?

    Is competence worth it if the cost is compassion?


    Marginalia

    I’m waiting to begin a new herbal medicine course, and this dream is revisiting old fears from being a lone parent student as a young woman. This is the third in a series of herb school dreams.

    In Incense Blocks & Period Costumes, I weigh old ways against new.
    In Fireweed and Bunny Munro, I’m lost but eager to learn.
    In I Was Late, Afterall, I abandon my own needs for accountability.
    In Flawed but Trying, I’m exposed in my mess while defending my son.

    Journaling helps to show me the bigger picture of what my subconscious is trying to do.

  • Fireweed | A Phoenix from the Ashes

    Fireweed | A Phoenix from the Ashes

    Chamaenerion angustifolium. 

    Familiarity breeds contempt. She’s always been there. Each year she becomes louder, more demanding, and each year, I shut her out. Pull her up and curse her under my breath. But when I tried to grow various herbs in pots and all I got was fireweed, I had to rethink her presence in my life.

    Having spent years in battle, I’d resigned myself to accepting her. She had spunk. And, given the consideration, her tendril-like leaves and fuchsia bonnet weren’t ugly. In fact, she was a damn sight better looking than bare earth.

    Our relationship started with me harvesting her from our garden. She wasn’t even in the back. No, she was cleverly colonising the borders and had even started to take a punt at the lawn.

    Slowly, deliberately, I firmly pulled at the base of her stems, until she gave up the fight and relaxed into my hands. She’s actually quite a shallow weed—much like Yarrow—easy to unearth if needed.

    Sitting at the garden table with the sun at my back, I slowly peeled away a leaf, inspecting it carefully on each side before placing it into a bowl. I continued in a rhythmic meditation until my bowl was full and I was left with a mound of naked stems.

    Was she happy now? I pondered.

    For two days I allowed the leaves to ferment before baking them in a low oven. Apparently, this would deepen the flavours.

    I cropped another fist of stems. This bunch would dry on the stem. So I can compare the taste, I thought.

    Honestly, I wasn’t impressed. The notes—too high. The taste—too astringent. I came, I smelt, I tasted, and I went. I felt no alignment with this weed. We remained strangers, even if now we were in acceptance of each other’s proximity.

    But by now, I know not to ignore my herbal allies when they call for me. And usually, I get a lot from them energetically—but this one… well, she didn’t say much, considering she was so bloody loud in every other way.

    Rosebay Willowherb (another of her common names, though I prefer fireweed) has virtues including demulcent, tonic, and astringent properties, with historical use in treating intestinal affections. Modern uses include treatment for seborrheic dermatitis and ulcerative colitis, among others.

    And there I wobbled my head and lol’d. Having been diagnosed with UC a few years back, and only recently with seborrheic dermatitis—after suffering for over twenty years—my head did a little high-five for ‘yay herbs’.

    And then I went back to ignoring her again.

    Every time I opened the door, a few more crusty leaves would drop to the floor. And I’d vacuum them up without a second thought—whilst scratching my ears… like I’ve done for years.

    When I know something is good or bad for me, sometimes, just knowing isn’t enough for me to change. I don’t know what it is inside that finally causes me to snap out of inertia and change behaviour.

    Often I wonder if it’s when something becomes so unbearable, or the downsides far outweigh the good. When the payoff to do different is rewarding enough.

    And it’s in self-reflection here that I started to wonder if I’d become married to my conditions. Why would I be holding onto these afflictions like a scabby old blanket? Did I think I was special? Or did I think, deep down, I didn’t deserve to be well?

    Or maybe fireweed just wasn’t tasty enough to endure on a daily basis—stripping the enamel off my teeth with every sip.

    A few weeks later I dreamed… guess who?
    Yeah, there she was, on my ‘to-do’ list like a herbal calling card.

    Fireweed was now basically saying: For fuck’s sake, Lee. I colonised your garden, your seed trays, and now your dreams, you daft bitch. Sort yourself out!

    That morning, I made myself a cup of fireweed tea.
    Okay okay, I said. I’m listening.

    And I gave her the space she’d been demanding from me. I sat down as I do, glass cup in hand, and we walked.

    Nothing dark.
    All the high notes:
    Lemon.
    Astringent.
    Drying.
    Bitter.
    Floral.
    Green apple.
    Fruit… cherry?
    Drying my teeth.
    Squeak squeak.

    Why aren’t we vibing? I thought.

    Never mind we don’t vibe.
    Drink your medicine.

    Fireweed wasn’t here to vibe.
    She was here as the medicine I so obviously needed but was reluctant to accept. And she, just like me wasn’t about to give up on her opinion that she was right and I should get my big girl pants on and do the work instead of nodding in agreement only half convinced about the way forward.

    Sometimes you don’t have to be convinced of the way, you just have to take the information you have on hand and make a judgment call based on facts, not feelings.

    The path might be boring and uneventful but necessary nevertheless.

    Bottoms up.

  • Fireweed and Bunny Munro

    Fireweed and Bunny Munro

    The Dream

    Herb school.
    I was struggling to learn.

    My teacher asked me:
    “Do you know the route of Bunny Munro?
    The low road along the river?
    The one he took to go fishing?”

    I nodded, uncertainly.

    “Then you know where I live.
    Come round at 7:00,
    and I’ll take you through it.
    A list.
    Of things to do.”

    Fireweed.

    It’s the only entry I can recall.

    The Meaning

    school
    The new path forward.
    But I’m struggling.
    And I need help.

    teacher
    She’s willing to guide me—
    but she expects me to take the path Bunny didn’t take.

    river
    The emotional low road.
    Inward.
    Following the bank of my inner landscape.

    The river = emotion.
    Fishing = delving.
    Go deep. Go slow.

    7
    The number of the divine.
    A cosmic nudge:
    Take the hard, boring, muddy path through your emotions.
    Fish out what’s true.
    Show up at my place at 7—and everything will become clear.

    fireweed
    She grows from ashes. We’re going to need her.

    What Lingers…

    What if the path to healing runs low, not high— through mud, not sky?

    What if blooming from ashes isn’t a miracle, but a method Fireweed already knows and can teach?


    Marginalia

    I’m waiting to begin a new herbal medicine course, and my dreams are pulling old patterns and fears to the surface. This is the second in a series of herb school dreams.

    In Incense Blocks & Period Costumes, I weigh old ways against new.
    In Competence vs. Compassion, I’m profiled by my tutors.
    In I Was Late, Afterall, I abandon my own needs for accountability.
    In Flawed but Trying, I’m exposed in my mess while defending my son.

    Journaling helps to see the tapestry being woven: the curriculum beneath my surface, the lessons I didn’t know I was studying.

  • Don’t Look Away

    Don’t Look Away

    Your generation
    doesn’t excuse
    your racism.

    Your ignorance
    doesn’t get
    you a pass.

    “Everyone was
    like that”
    is not a
    reason.

    Your words
    and attitude
    still hold weight
    now.

    It is not,
    nor will it ever
    be
    OK.

    It’s your job
    and mine
    to gouge it
    out.

    Because we
    didn’t stop
    being racist —
    we just
    got better
    at covering
    it
    up.

    If you want
    to do better,
    then do
    better.

    I will not
    shield your
    fragile soul —

    like you haven’t
    shielded others
    from yours.

    And I expect
    the same
    of you
    for me.

    We own
    the knife
    we wield.


    Marginalia

    This reflects an argument I had with my sister at our father’s hospital bedside.
    I’m tired of the “not all people” refrain, the excuses we make for ourselves and others.
    Let’s do our dirty work.
    Reach into our rot.
    Get comfortable.
    Let’s not
    look
    away.

    I hate racism, and how it’s woven into society.
    I stay vigilant for its insidious appearances—and when I see them, I name them.
    I stay with the discomfort,
    refuse to look away.

    I believe racism played a part in the erasure of my mother’s lineage.
    I explore this in It Began with a Name—that history still lives in me.
    Witnessing and naming it is my reckoning.

  • Monster and the Doe

    Monster and the Doe

    The train is packed.
    6:30 p.m., to be exact.
    Commuters disembark.

    A seat at a table,
    I spy.
    I sit.

    The girl—she’s young.
    A rail card at the back of her phone.
    Her eyelashes thick with glue.
    Like a baby doll,
    with eyes of a doe.

    A bottle of Coke—
    she sniffs.
    She’s tired.

    A festival, perhaps?
    But the Crocs on her feet say no.

    The man next to her—good-looking.
    Much older.
    Maybe her young dad.

    Greying hair, a silver fox.
    A can of Monster in hand.

    His eyes barely open—
    they’re red.
    He coughs,
    and reaches gently
    for her leg.

    They play-fight for a moment.
    His remark:
    “You’re being weird today.”

    She rests her head
    in her arms
    on the table.

    He closes his eyes,
    unfazed.

    Her sniffing is soft and gentle—
    as is the ‘blankie’ she holds.
    Worn down to its innards.
    Grey, battered, and old.

    Her eyes—wet.
    His eyes—closed.

    Between apathy and sleep,
    he reaches out quietly
    to her.

    But she shirks him.

    He sends a text.
    She throws down her phone.

    The phone rings.
    Caller ID: Dad.

    He clears off.
    “See ya around.”

    She answers:
    “My phone was in my bag.”
    “I’ll be home soon.”

    Power and control.
    Naivete and innocence.
    A good match—
    they always make.


    Marginalia

    My great-grandmother was 16
    when she had her first child.
    Her partner — my great-grandfather — was 48.

    I explore these dynamics more fully in It Began With a Name.

  • The Slow Boat to China

    The Slow Boat to China

    The Dream

    An office.
    I’m talking—
    to an ex-boyfriend, no less.

    An old boss,
    from a life gone by—
    asks me:

    Would I like to take
    the slow boat to China
    with him?

    The Meaning

    Old patterns. Old behaviours.
    I’m being invited—not coerced, not wooed.
    The journey is long, slow, and arduous.
    If I accept, this is mine. My terms. My timeline.
    I’m heading forward with eyes open.
    This isn’t regression. It’s sovereignty.

    What Lingers

    What if it’s not the destination that matters, but the journey?

    What if taking an old path isn’t regression—but power, reclaimed through choice and clarity?


    Marginalia

    Old boyfriends and previous bosses appear frequently at this time.

    In This Path Used to Be Shared I tell an ex I’ve moved on. In Clown Boss, Borrowed Passwords I’m still labouring. In What If the Sea Takes It All I consider letting the tide erase it all.

    The theme: old patterns stepping forward to be cleared, one by one.