Across continents and millennia, Druids and Vedic seers tapped into the same astonishing truth: the Earth and the human spirit are inseparably woven...
... and real healing begins when we remember and reinforce that bond through sacred intention and practices.
Their myths echo each tradition’s truth of the sanctity of all life, including the power found in sacred rivers, holy mountains, and the Divine Feminine as the source of life.
And both affirm a truth that modern people are only beginning to rediscover —the human body and the living Earth are mirrors of one another, with our energy centers corresponding to energy centers in the land.
This shared wisdom isn’t confined to the past — it’s alive today, waiting for us to experience it directly. And that’s exactly what you’re invited to do in a special one-hour event with renowned Druid teacher Philip Carr-Gomm.
Philip has spent decades immersed in Druidry, psychology, and spiritual practice. He discovered that the Druidic and Vedic traditions — though born in different lands — share striking similarities in language and worldview.
Join Philip for a deeply spiritual event, where he’ll take you on an inner pilgrimage to a sacred well in Glastonbury, long associated with the heart chakra. In the Vedic system, the heart chakra — anahata — is considered the vital center of compassion, love, and balance, and Glastonbury itself is often regarded as the planetary reflection of this energy.
In this guided journey, you’ll travel through seven banks of flowers, each one resonating with a different chakra within you, just as the Vedic seers mapped the subtle body as a series of energy centers that mirror the cosmos. At the well, you’ll receive blessings that can nourish your heart and spirit while reminding you that your inner world and the outer landscape are woven together.
Philip reminds us that if there’s one chakra most vital to develop, it is the heart. And this practice reveals why — opening your heart is not just a personal act of healing, it’s also a gift to the Earth.
Both the Druids and the Vedics knew that pilgrimage is never a one-way street. When you walk with reverence, when you engage with sacred places, you give something back. Your presence and intention help restore vitality to the land, just as the land restores vitality to you.