Pont du Gard

Personal Geography

I recently returned to a childhood place where my family had swims and picnics on hot summer days. I didn’t need the GPS to get there as my entire being remembered the way to the Pont du Gard.

I rely on maps to navigate places I do not know. I study them and trust them to take me where I need to go. And I know that when I step off the path to follow my inner compass, I take the chance to get lost, and yes, I have gotten desperately lost. Yet, like a migratory bird traveling between familiar places, I can sense my way and find the course again. Some say we are never lost.

It has been my life’s journey to travel, study, work, and love in other lands, and personal geographies are etched in my body. I remember well where my heart was broken and where my spirit soared. 

Maps are a visual guide to the places we have been, the people, the stories, and the journey.

Some localities have been welcoming and generous to us, and others much less so. We can speak of feeling empowered or disempowered, and if there are “power places,” we imply that there are places with less force to sustain us there. All the while, emotions and sensations color our experiences. It is easy to enjoy a lovely place when we feel vibrant with life and it becomes more complicated when we seek a geographical cure. How do we make sense of all this?

https://www.pontdugard.fr/en