Sunday, 22 June 2025

thoughts from a boardwalk

 

Yma o Hyd (“Still Here”)

I went for a stroll on the Boardwalk at Cors Fochno the other day. It was a sunny Sunday afternoon in April; surprisingly warm once you got a bit of shelter from the breeze.  It was actually so much more than a stroll. First of all, it was my first venture out onto the boardwalk for over 15 years, since my MS started getting disabling, and second, it wasn’t a stroll - it was my first time out there on my new and game changing off-road electric wheelchair. So it was very much more than a “stroll”, it was like visiting an old friend that I had lost touch with for 15 years!  I sat for a while basking in the fresh spring sunshine, drinking in the sights and sounds, the delicate bobbing cotton grass, the glistening sphagnum, the surrounding woods with  an orchestra of jostling avian priorities.  And the smell! - gorse flowers, bursting into the breeze with their sweet coconut scent, the hint of salty air on the breeze.  It’s only a little loop of the bog that is accessible, the rest being set aside for wildlife and regeneration.  Finally we have learned to cherish this wild space, and realize that, for it to recover, we have to allow it  to flourish without mechanical interference. The irony isn’t lost on me that this  place suffered under technology’s footprint, while I am benefiting from another machine, albeit one that, to me, represents liberation and reconnection with life and nature.

I feel a bond, a kinship with this beautiful faltering land, the once great bog of Cors Fochno. Referred to by ancient maps as “The Great Bog”; a  vast wild expanse now whittled down to  a kernel, by men and machine forging and forcing their way through the most intimate unspoiled havens. That tapestry of delicately interwoven food chains - pockets of dazzling flowers amid the gentle yielding carpet of green, so vital and dynamic -  ripped, scraped away, drained and enclosed. Soft sphagnum stripped down to bedrock. Rivers mutated and broken. The straight lines of steel and stone have left their mark on  the land like an old wound.

I too, a kernel of a once boisterous and untamable ball of energy,  future shimmered brightly  before me, bursting with potential, pockets of dazzling flowers amid the gentle yielding carpet of  good health. But I, like this beloved bog have a disease that has changed my very essence. My disease is stripping my nerves  down to bare wires; scars I will never see, but I feel them in my faltering gait, my foggy days and sleepless nights. that boisterous girl is now long dead, and in the decay this thoughtful woman was eventually born. This slow transformation from carefree girl to a quieter, more sober and considered version of myself is due to the effects of nature’s unpredictable movements; forces that will never be tamed,  while the bog’s  malaise was caused by modern progress, the taming of nature that should never have been tamed.

We’ve  both borne our battering, but  vital tendrils of connection have been severed forever. The march of disease is as inevitable as the march of modernity, and just as catastrophic. Recovery is unlikely, but survival is key; we both fiercely cherish the life we hold. Tiny lives bustling about their every eternal day, and my tiny life of quiet observation. Entwined in the incessant hum and throb of one day at a time; birth, death, decay, rebirth -  the constant chant of the ages. We both have clung on defiantly, and so been transformed, not always through choice, but sometimes necessity. 

Pockets of disconnect baffle the land, things out of place and out of time, but still they cling to every chance of another day in the sun, like the reeds that still grow in the drainage ditches,  reduced to remnants without function, they stand as reminders of what once was, and is still, in its own defiant way. And I take strength from these ancient sentinels, adapted to life condensed to a roadside ditch,  still strong, thriving in their tiny niche, and very much still here!

The wild and beautiful Great Bog is no more, now an enclosed and monitored vestigial treasure, an echo, with a hope, against the odds, of rebirth. But even now, beaten down and ravaged, the old  place still whispers to those who are listening: “yma o hyd”.  Despite the indifferent, busy world moving ever onwards, like the old anachronistic bog,  I too am still here. And so we will both stand in our quiet defiance and silently shout “Yma o hyd”.