What Is Druidry?

The first time I sat beside the Thames and felt its breath moving through me, I didn’t call it Druidry. I didn’t call it anything at all. There was no ritual, no robe, no sacred chant whispered into the wind. Just a stillness. A sense that I had stumbled into a conversation already in progress – between water and stone, current and moon, memory and presence. That moment wasn’t a beginning or an epiphany. But if I were to map my Druid path from here to there, it might be the place I’d draw the first spiral.

I’m often asked, now, what Druidry is. Not academically, not even always spiritually – just… what is it? Is it a religion? A philosophy? A kind of nature-based mindfulness? Something old and mysterious, or something new and made-up? And where do I, a queer neurodivergent man living in suburban London with a Labrador and a growing collection of fox folklore, fit into that?

This is my answer – or at least, a glimpse of it.

Continue reading “What Is Druidry?”

Welcome to The London Druid

A person stands on the wet riverside walkway, gazing at London’s Tower Bridge, which is partially obscured by thick morning fog.

Welcome to my new site. This blog is a home for modern Druidry, mythic insight, and mindful living – rooted in the sacred rhythms of the seasons, the spirit of the city, and the quiet power of storytelling.

I’m a queer, neurodivergent Druid living in London. My practice blends ancient myth with present-day awareness, and this space is where I’ll share fragments of that path:

  • Reflections on the turning Wheel of the Year
  • Rituals and small acts of sacred intention
  • Urban nature observations and encounters with spirit.
  • Poetry, short stories, and divinatory insights.
  • Thoughts on inclusive spirituality, folklore, and liminality.

Some posts will be deeply personal. Other will be practical. Some will be playful or strange. Many will sit somewhere in between – like the stillness of a Grove, where inner and outer worlds meet.

Whether you’re a fellow Druid, a curious wanderer, or someone walking their own winding path, you’re very welcome here.

Thank you for stopping by.

~The London Druid