Hello, I’m really happy you’re here.
This is a quiet corner where I explore what it means to live with more heart and less hurry - through stillness, creativity, and connection. I’m someone learning, right alongside you, how to pause long enough to listen for what truly matters. Pull up a chair. There’s space for you here.
Happy February 1st 🎉
And a special, quiet happy birthday to my son. He would cringe to know I’m sharing that here, so let’s chat about the other important occasion - Imbolc.
In a December newsletter, I began to honour my Celtic roots, so it only makes sense that Imbolc would be wildly curious to me today.
What is Imbolc?
Imbolc is an ancient Celtic seasonal festival marking the midpoint between the winter solstice and the spring equinox. It’s not full spring yet, it’s the promise of spring. A subtle shift. The first whisper of light returning.
Traditionally, it’s associated with Saint Brigid (and the older goddess Brigid before her) - a figure connected to
✨ light
🔥 the hearth
🌱 fertility and new life
🎨 creativity and inspiration
So this day isn’t about bold beginnings.
It’s about small stirrings. Quiet readiness. The sense that something beneath the surface is waking up.
The Energy of This Season
Imbolc lives in that tender in-between space:
The days are getting lighter - even if winter still has a grip
Ideas feel like seeds, not plans
We feel a soft urge to clear, refresh, and make space
Hope returns, not loudly, but steadily
It’s the season of:
“I’m not fully ready yet… but I can feel that I will be.”
This is exactly how I feel.
There’s a quiet sense of something beginning again. I’ve been resting more, moving slowly, letting things be still, and yet beneath that stillness, I notice small stirrings. A gentle readiness. A soft sense that something is waking up.
This week’s pauses are inspired by that gentle turning. Take what feels right from this week’s pauses. Leave the rest.
If you’d like to explore a lovely story and seasonal recipe connected to Imbolc, here’s a beautiful piece from Danielle at Gather Victoria, someone I’ve had the pleasure of collaborating with on events in Victoria:
https://gathervictoria.com/2019/01/17/imbolc-lavender-rosemary-seed-cake
May this week meet you gently, and may you trust the quiet beginnings unfolding in their own time.
If you feel moved, I’d be grateful if you like this post with a ❤️, share a thought in the comments, buy me a coffee, or pass it along to someone who might enjoy a pause. Each small gesture helps this quiet space reach others who may need it.








Hello Kathy. Oh I love how you write. I do love thinking of The Quiet beginnings. It reminds me that yesterday I saw my first daffodil growing here in Victoria on the last day of January. Thanks and hugs.
Really lovely post Kathy!!!