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Practicing Rootedness in an Uprooted Age – Hadden Turner

For 28 long years, the sunny southern English city of Chelmsford was the place I called home. I was born and bred there as we say: learned to walk and talk in the house still owned by my parents, worshipped there in a small church, was married there, and rented my first house there. Chelmsford made me into the man I am now; it will forever be my heimat

But Chelmsford is no longer the place I call home. Just before Christmas last year, I moved with my wife away from everything that was familiar in Chelmsford, “up north” to the cloudy uplands of the Yorkshire Dales: a land of high fells and traditional sheep pastures enclosed by drystone walls. Most people our age move to urban areas and big cities; our move was against the tide, so to speak, in that we moved to a small rural community in Sedbergh. But we were deliberate in our decisions, earnestly desiring to be rooted in this place where beauty is abundant, community is thicker and friendlier, and opportunities for service are ubiquitous. (And, it must be said, house prices are a lot lower up north!)

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