A Little More Tenderness and a Little Less Fear – The Story of Bryn the Hermit

Elderly man with long beard sitting cross-legged on a rock, wearing layered robes, with a walking stick and pouch beside him, mountains in background
Bryn The Hermit

In a corner of Wales where the wind remembers every ancient road, there stood a plateau crowned by a stubborn old mountain. Not the tallest peak, perhaps, but one wearing its clouds like a shawl and keeping its secrets tucked beneath mossy stones and bracken that whispered in the rain. On this plateau lived a hermit, a man they called Bryn, though few could swear they’d ever heard him speak more than a few quiet words at a time. The path to Bryn’s dwelling was narrow, carved by the patient steps of seasons. It wound through gorse and bramble, climbed a stair of loose slate, and finally opened onto a small, stone-creaking cabin perched at the edge of the world where the land fell away into a thousand green miles. The cabin had no fancy bells or bright windows, only a single small lattice blinking gold in the sunset, and a smoke-blackened chimney never seeming to stop sighing into the dusk.

Bryn lived alone, but he was not lonely. He kept company with the forest’s patient rhythm: the slow turning of the seasons, the wary glances of deer along the ridge, the sly intrusion of badgers at dusk, and the countless songs of birds nesting in the eaves when the storm blew in from the sea. He tended a garden seeming to grow where it wished, herbs and roots thriving in soil that was more memory than earth. He spoke softly to stones, and the stones, if you listened with your heart rather than your ears, spoke back in a language of weight and time. People from valleys below would sometimes find the path to the plateau, drawn by a rumour of wisdom and a need for counsel. They carried with them the burdens of ordinary life: a quarrel with a sister, a fear of the future, a decision that would bend a life into a new shape. And when they stood before Bryn, they found a man who looked at them with the patience of rivers and the calm certainty of a tree that has weathered many storms.

“Tell me what you carry,” Bryn would say, not as a demand but as a door opened by trust.

And they would begin, slowly, as if peeling an apple grown too old to hurry, revealing the weight inside: a grudge burning like a coal in the pocket, a dream grown stiff with doubt, a plan that had forgotten to breathe.
Bryn listened as the forest listened: with a generous stillness that let the speaker feel the full gravity of their own words. Then, without booming judgment, he would offer a thread of truth, sometimes wrapped in a parable, sometimes in a small, practical act. He spoke of rivers that do not hurry to the sea, of mountains that rise not to impress but to shelter, of nights so quiet even the heart could hear its own breath. He urged patience, and offered questions rather than answers, because questions, he believed, were the hatchways to the hidden rooms inside every choice.

On one such day, a storm rolled in from the sea with a beard of rain and a voice like clattering armour. The plateau trembled under the wind, the slate rattled underfoot, and the forest hissed with the warning of sap that might freeze on a moonless night. A young woman, eyes bright with stubbornness, stood at Bryn’s door with a letter clenched in her hand, the letter she dared not send, the one that would either mend a family rift or burn it to ashes.

Bryn welcomed her with the quiet smile of a man who has learned to recognise the exact moment when a storm has become a story and not a danger. He listened as she spoke of kinship and clever plans, of promises made in the glow of the hearth and promises broken in the cold arithmetic of daily life. When her tale ran dry, he pressed a small seed into her palm, a seed that looked, to the untrained eye, like any ordinary seed but carried, in its dry shell, the memory of a hillside that never stopped growing.

“Plant it where the earth remembers your laughter,” he said simply. “Water it with your patience, and answer with your presence, not your justification. If the seed grows, let it teach you where to bend and where to stand firm. If it does not, then you have learned something no letter could teach: what you truly want to carry into tomorrow.”

She left with the seed nestled in the folds of her mind, and the storm broke into a chorus of rain and wind sounding like old trees sobbing with relief. Bryn watched the girl go, the plateaus, the mountains, and the sea beyond them settling into a gentler rhythm. He did not possess tools for every problem, nor did he pretend to. He had something rarer: a way of listening that allowed people to hear the right questions inside their own hearts.

Time in Bryn’s life did not rush. It curled like smoke around the chimney and drifted through the cabin’s wooden bones. The forest grew older with him, or perhaps with him inside it, becoming a book whose margins were carved by the rain. And the plateau, that quiet crown on the Welsh hills, remained a place where endings did not announce themselves with thunder, but with a soft light softening the edges of a life already worn just enough to fit a wiser future.

If you asked Bryn the meaning of wisdom, he would point to the gentle hinge of a door that leads to a room you never knew existed, a room where you can choose a different path without losing your old self. He would tell you wisdom is not a shout or a flame, but a steady breath in the long corridor of tomorrow. And so the hermit lived, not as a figure of mystery but as a patient reminder: that a life kept in harmony with the forest, its rain, wind, and quiet growth can teach us to slow down, listen, and perhaps, just perhaps, choose the path that asks for a little more tenderness and a little less fear. 

The Ghost of K2

Once upon a time, there lived a passionate mountaineer named Alex who had an insatiable love for climbing. From a young age, he was drawn to the towering peaks, feeling a magnetic pull to the heights only the mountains could offer. Alex spent his life chasing summits, driven by an unquenchable thirst for adventure and the thrill of conquering new peaks. For forty-five years, he traversed the globe, scaling the world’s most challenging mountains. From the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas to the rugged terrain of the Andes, he left no summit unconquered. His determination and skill earned him a reputation as one of the greatest mountaineers of his time, with countless stories of his daring ascents circulating among the climbing community.

However, Alex’s fate took a mysterious turn on his eleventh expedition to K2, the formidable second-highest mountain in the world. As he and his team ascended the mountain’s treacherous slopes, a sudden storm descended, engulfing them in a swirling chaos of snow and wind. Despite his experience and resilience, Alex and his team were separated in the blizzard, and he was never seen again. Rumours began circulating among the local Sherpas and climbers that Alex’s spirit still roamed the slopes of K2, his presence felt in the eerie mist that often shrouded the mountain. Some claimed to catch glimpses of a lone figure moving through the fog, a spectral mountaineer searching for the summit that had eluded him in life. Over the years, tales of Alex’s ghostly apparition grew, with climbers sharing stories of encounters with the phantom mountaineer on the slopes of K2. Some saw him beckoning them onward, while others felt his presence as a warning to respect the power of the mountains.

Today, the legend of Alex, the mountaineer who could never stop climbing, lives on in the mist-shrouded slopes of K2. His spirit is said to watch over those who dare to challenge the mountain, a reminder of the thin line between triumph and tragedy in the world of high-altitude adventure.

Image by AI

The Unlikely Trio: A Tale of Adventure in the Welsh Wilderness

Once upon a time, in the breathtaking landscapes of Wales, an unusual trio set out on an extraordinary adventure. This trio consisted of a courageous dog named Max, a clever cat named Luna, and a strong-willed badger named Boris. Each with their unique abilities and personalities, they embarked on a long journey that would test their friendship and resolve. It all began on a crisp morning when Max, Luna, and Boris met at the edge of a dense forest near the towering mountains of Wales.

The sun was just beginning to rise, casting a golden hue over the rolling hills and valleys that stretched out before them. Despite their differences in size and species, the three friends shared a deep bond and a thirst for exploration. With wagging tails and eager eyes, they set off on their adventure, their paws and claws carrying them over rocky paths and through lush forests. Max, with his keen sense of smell and boundless energy, led the way, sniffing out the trail ahead. Luna, with her sharp wit and agile movements, navigated the tricky terrain with grace and precision. Boris, with his burly strength and unwavering determination, provided protection and guidance to his smaller companions.

As they journeyed deeper into the wilderness, they encountered obstacles and challenges that tested their teamwork and spirit. They crossed roaring rivers on rickety bridges, climbed steep cliffs with sheer determination, and braved dark caves filled with mysterious echoes. Through it all, they relied on each other’s strengths and supported one another when needed. Along the way, they met a variety of creatures, from wise old owls to playful foxes, each sharing tales of the land and its secrets. They tasted sweet berries plucked from tangled bushes, drank from crystal-clear streams that gushed from the mountains and rested under the canopy of ancient trees that whispered stories of ages past. As days turned into weeks and the landscape changed around them, the trio forged a bond that transcended words and species. They became not just companions on a journey but a family united by a shared purpose and a love for the wild beauty of Wales. Finally, after many trials and triumphs, they reached the summit of the highest mountain, where a panoramic view of the rolling valleys and shimmering lakes unfolded before them. As they stood side by side, wind tousling their fur and whiskers, they knew that their adventure was not just a journey through the wilderness but a journey of the heart.

And so, the unlikely trio – Max, Luna, and Boris – descended from the mountains, their hearts full of memories and their spirits forever intertwined. As they returned to the forest where it all began, they knew that their friendship would endure, like the ancient mountains and valleys of Wales, standing strong against the test of time. Ultimately, it was not the destination but the journey itself, the bonds forged, and the memories made along the way. And so, the tale of the adventurous trio of a dog, a cat, and a badger in the Welsh wilderness became a legend, whispered by the winds and echoed by the rivers, a testament to the power of friendship and the magic of exploration.

Images 1,2,3 by Gill Brooks http://www.gillsplace.com