PoetryOfPlace
-
The Bread of Heaven at Clonmacnoise

Fresh from the altar at Temple Connor… At 11:00 a.m. today, on this Feast of St Columba, we gathered beside the Shannon where prayers have risen for fifteen centuries. As the notes of the Eucharist settle into the ancient stone, we reflect on what it means to be fed—and then sent. The Bread of Heaven… Continue reading
-
A hymn celebrating the Eucharist—“O Christ, our Manna in the Wild” (CM)

New Hymn: Taste the mystery of the Eucharist woven into Ireland’s bogs, hills, and thin places. “O Christ, our Manna in the wild”—sing it today. Continue reading
-
But why so flipping hot?

Summer by the Barrow brings hawthorn blossom, swallows, sunshine, fluid restrictions, and one recurring prayer. A humorous NeuroDivine reflection on gratitude and heatwaves. Continue reading
-
The Monasticism of June

Find rest this June. Discover how the steady rhythms of the Book of Common Prayer and Benedictine stabilitas offer sanctuary for the sensory-overwhelmed, weary soul. Continue reading
-
Finding our people. A hymn for the Visitation—“O God, who lifts the lowly ones” (DCM)

What happens when Mary finds someone who understands? For the Feast of the Visitation, this new hymn explores the joy of recognition, belonging, and hidden grace through the landscapes of the Irish Midlands. A reflection on finding our people—and the sacred spaces where we can finally lay down the mask. Continue reading
-
From the Depths to the Dawn: A Reflection on Grief, Landscape, and Psalm 130

New on NeuroDivine: From the Depths to the Dawn — a hymn and reflection shaped by Psalm 130, grief, the landscapes of Antrim, and the slow movement from sorrow toward morning. Continue reading
-
The Echolocation of Grace

After dialysis, the bats over the River Barrow became unexpected signs of grace. In this reflection, Br Michael explores the intersections of chronic illness, Benedictine stability, and neurodivergent faith in the quiet, liminal space of twilight exhaustion. Continue reading
AnglicanBenedictine, AutisticFaith, AutisticSpirituality, Benedictine, BenedictineMoments, BenedictineSpirituality, CelticChristianity, CelticSpirituality, ChronicIllness, ChurchOfIreland, Dialysis, IrishSpirituality, NeurodivergentFaith, NeuroDivine, PoetryOfPlace, Prayer, QuietMoments, RuleOfStBenedict, SacredRoutine, SacredSpaces, Spirituality, ThinPlaces -
A new hymn for Trinity Sunday—”O Trinity of earth and light” (DCM)

Celebrate the Three-in-One through the otters and hearth-cats of Kildare. This new Trinity hymn weaves ancient mystery into the sensory rhythms of the Irish landscape. Continue reading
AnglicanTradition, Autism, AutisticFaith, BenedictineSpirituality, CelticChristianity, CelticSpirituality, ChurchOfIreland, ContemplativePrayer, IrishAnglicanVoice, IrishSpirituality, LiturgicalReflection, ModernMonasticism, MonasticWisdom, NeurodivergentFaith, NeuroDivine, PangurBán, PoetryOfPlace, Prayer, QuietMoments, Routine, RuleOfStBenedict, SacredRoutine, SacredSpaces, ScriptureAndStillness, Spirituality, SpiritualJourney, Trinity, TrinitySunday -
The Southward Track: A Liturgy of Woven Threads

I was writing the prayers my heart would need before my eyes even knew the shape of the mountain ahead. Continue reading
AccessibleTravel, AnglicanCommunion, AnglicanTradition, Autism, AutisticFaith, BenedictineRhythms, BenedictineSpirituality, CelticChristianity, Christianity, ChristInTheEveryday, ChronicIllness, ChronicIllnessCommunity, ChronicIllnessFaith, CompassionInCare, Contemplation, ContemplativeCare, ContemplativePrayer, DailyDevotion, Dialysis, DialysisJourney, DialysisLife, ExploringIreland, Faith, FaithAndHistory, FaithAndIllness, FaithInAction, FaithInTheEveryday, family, FindingConnection, FreeTravelPass, HealingPrayer, health, HeldInLove, HolyStillness, Hymns, HymnWriting, Ireland, IrelandTravel, IrishAnglicanVoice, IrishLandscape, IrishRail, IrishRailJourneys, IrishReflection, IrishSpirituality, Kildare, LifeOnDialysis, LiturgicalReflection, LiveWithADisability, ModernMonasticism, NeurodivergentFaith, NeurodivergentTheology, NeuroDivine, PatientVoices, Pilgrimage, Poetry, PoetryOfPlace, Prayer, QueerIrishVoices, QuietCourage, QuietMoments, QuietWitness, ResillienceInIllness, Reverence, Routine, SacredRoutine, SacredSong, SacredSpaces, Sanctity, ScriptureAndStillness, SmallMercies, Spirituality, SpiritualJourney, SpiritualReflection, ThinPlaces, ThresholdOfGrace, Travel, TravelByTrain, TravelWithPurpose, Vigil, writing -
Keeping Vigil at the Veil

Beside death’s quiet veil, love keeps vigil beneath Christ’s gentle presence. Continue reading
CelticChristianity, CelticSpirituality, Christianity, DeepFeeling, EndOfLife, Faith, GriefAndLoss, HolyVigil, IrishLandscape, IrishSpirituality, LoveAndFaithfulness, NatureAsWitness, NeuroDivine, PoetryOfPlace, Portrush, QuietMoments, QuietPresence, SacredMaskingDropped, SacredPoetry, SacredPresence, SacredSpaces, SensoryGrounding, Slemish, Spirituality, ThinPlaces, UnmaskedGrief, Vigil, VulnerableFaith -
A Journey of Faith and Farewell

A train journey north, turning impending heartbreak into a holy poem. Continue reading
-
A Space for Grace

A quiet Irish café, ancient ruins, and an overflowing cup. Explore how sensory peace becomes a form of sacred hospitality for the neurodivergent soul. Continue reading
Autism, AutisticFaith, ChristInTheEveryday, FaithInTheEveryday, FindingConnection, HolyStillness, IrishReflection, LiveWithADisability, NeurodivergentAndProud, NeurodivergentFaith, NeurodivergentTheology, NeuroDivine, Pilgrimage, Poetry, PoetryOfPlace, QuietMoments, QuietWitness, Routine, SacredRoutine, SacredSpaces, SmallMercies, Spirituality, ThresholdOfGrace, writing -
A new Pentecost hymn—”Spirit, flame upon the heather” (87 87 D)

The hymn “Spirit, Flame Upon the Heather” celebrates the Holy Spirit’s presence in nature, emphasizing individuality and community while preparing for Pentecost and expressing authentic faith. Continue reading
-
A Mystical Eucharistic Hymn by the Barrow for the Sunday After Ascension (Easter 7)—“O God who rises, veiled in light” (DLM)

Grounded in the River Barrow’s gentle flow, this contemplative Ascension hymn weaves Irish ecology with Eucharistic mystery, inviting weary souls into the Spirit’s protective, hidden peace. Continue reading
AnglicanTradition, AutisticFaith, bible, CelticChristianity, CelticSpirituality, ChristianHealing, Christianity, ChurchOfIreland, ContemplativePrayer, DivineHealer, DivinePeace, Faith, HealingTheHidden, IrishSpirituality, jesus, LiturgicalReflection, NeurodivergentFaith, NeuroDivine, PastoralMinistry, PoetryOfPlace, QuietMoments, SacredLandscape, SacredSpaces, Spirituality, SundayAfterAscension, TheEucharist -
A new hymn for St Matthias—“When saints are called in hidden ways” (CM)

Celebrate the “hidden” call of St Matthias through this neurodivergent lens. A lyrical CM hymn honoring quiet presence, Irish landscapes, and the courage of being seen. Continue reading
-
A new hymn for the Ascension Day—”Across the hills where skylarks rise” (LM)

Experience the Ascension through the “bottom-up” beauty of the Irish landscape. This new hymn finds Christ’s “steady grace” in the salmon, the fox, and the hawthorn. Continue reading
AltarHymn, AscensionDay, Autism, AutisticFaith, bible, Christianity, ChurchOfIreland, CountyAntrim, Faith, Fox, FoxAndHare, Hare, Hawthorn, Ireland, IrishAnglicanVoice, IrishHymnody, IrishSpirituality, jesus, LiturgicalReflection, NeurodivergentFaith, NeurodivergentTheology, NeuroDivine, NewHymn, PoetryOfPlace, Prayer, QuietMoments, RiverBush, Salmon, Spirituality -
Not to Us Be Glory: Vocation, Vigil, and Psalm 115: a new hymn—“Not to us be glory given” (87 87 D)

Not to us be glory: a hymn shaped by Psalm 115 turns watchfulness into mercy, and calls us from self toward service, trust, and quiet, faithful witness. Continue reading
-
Waiting for the Train

A poem written while waiting for a train listening to the birdsong around us. Continue reading
-
A new Easter hymn for Good Shepherd Sunday—“The Shepherd walks our winding ways” (DCM)

Walk the Barrow’s mist with a Shepherd who never hurries. This new hymn offers a quiet, neurodivergent-friendly refuge for Good Shepherd Sunday’s winding, sacred paths. Continue reading
