
If this is your first time here, welcome.
This blog is a quiet space for reflection, memory, star gazing, and walking-with-attention. You’ll find stories drawn from a life of inner and outer journeys—along riverbanks, through Greece and the Middle East, in detention protests, and beneath the stars.
If you’re not sure where to begin, here are a few pieces that offer a sense of what lives here:
🥾 Embodied Practice & Presence
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Why I Walk the Way I Do – A meditation on walking as prayer
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Living Simply, Moving Freely – On health, discipline, and monk-like joy in routine
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The Unbranded Way – A reclaiming of strength and clarity at 73
🌌 Mysticism, Meaning & Memory
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Exiled by Devotion – A spiritual encounter that stung, and then taught
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The Apple and the Cosmos – A single apple becomes a universe
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Astromusings – On reading the sky as symbol, not prediction
These are only a few of my thoughts and feelings about living in this world within worlds.
You can explore by theme, scroll by instinct, or simply follow the stars.
📷 Want to see where I’ve walked, sailed and mused?
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Click here for photos from my daily walks along the Hunter River floodplain in NSW.
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Click here for photos from my journey through Greece and the Middle East.
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Click here for images from the Flotillas of Hope voyage to Nauru.
- Click here for images from my neighbourhood and home.
About This Blog – Journeys and Star Gazing
by Stavros
If after death is the same as before death, our life is bookended by nothingness.
If we live to 84, our blink of time is like a night fly’s compared to the age of the Earth.
And yet, within this blink, within this grain-of-sand body — infinite worlds unfold.
Perhaps by going within, we begin to see: the nothingness is the All.
The All is the One.
This blog began as a place to explore what arises on the inside — while walking, sky-gazing, listening to silence, or simply dipping a biscuit into tea.
It holds stories, musings, photographs, memories of activism, astrological reflections, and sometimes just “stuff I like.”
I walk daily along the banks of the Hunter River and the floodplain. I take photos with my phone — a Samsung passed down from others — and I share many of these images on my BlueSky account. You’ll also find them here.
Often, my walk becomes a meditation.
My breath, the touch of wind, the distant birdsong — all become companions. The “monkey mind” is still there, of course, climbing around inside my skull. But the slow walk softens its chatter, like a shadow puppet at the edges of my awareness.
A journey doesn’t have to be across oceans. It can happen from lounge to kitchen. It can happen by looking up at the Milky Way or by reading a birth chart.
All are acts of star gazing.
What is Star Gazing?
To me, star gazing lives between astronomy and astrology.
I look up at the stars — the old light from Alpha Centauri or a pulse of sunlight just 8 minutes old — and I wonder: Why am I here?
Then I look at a Sky Map (what some call a horoscope), and I read the same stars differently — as a language, a mirror, a way of speaking to the deeper parts of ourselves.
Astrology for me is not about prediction. It is synchronicity written in sky script.
When something meaningful happens — a song, a thought, a phone call, all arriving together — it is not cause and effect, but a message of resonance.
This is how astrology works for me: not as science, but as symbol, as story, as soul language.
In this blog, you’ll find:
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Reflections that may not appear astrological at first, but carry star matter beneath the surface
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Poems, lyrics, quotes, and snapshots of daily life
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Stories from my activist past:
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The Cultural Stomp (1997)
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Woomera Easter Action (2002)
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Baxter Easter Action (2003)
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And always, reflections and stories imbued with synchronicity and awareness
This space is full of journeys and skywatching, of memory and the moment, of the outer world and the inner cosmos.
You’re welcome to wander through it — just as I wander through my walks — without haste, without expectation.
If something here stirs you, I’d love to hear from you.
Thank you for visiting.
— Stavros




Dear Stavros,
I am so glad I found you! It is always so helpful to read some things. I especially like Rumi and The Rules of Life. It is a good way to start the day!
Shelley
Hello Shelly
It’s always good to know that one’s effort to communicate across the internet via a website is useful to someone. Thanks for telling me that this set of “wiseacrings” of mine have given you a good start to your day. I hope that it is for many more.
all the best
stavros
Steve, Ijust logged onto this section of your website. I like your meditation on journeying, even a short walk, and the photographs are beautiful. The one of the new moon reflected over water is haunting.Now I will look at more of your writings.
hey, nice blog…really like it and added to bookmarks. keep up with good work
Dear Stavros,
Hello, I work for a media organization– I am wondering if it is possible to find out some more information about the “Refugee Silent Welfare Committees” in Dadaab — you posted their message on your blog. I would be interested in getting in touch with someone from the committee to ask more about the conditions they describe. Would this be possible? Of course, I understand that they would want their identities protected. Kindly let me know.
Thank you.
Your website is cool!!
I ought to admit that your blog is very interesting. I have spent a lot of my free time reading your content. Thanks a lot!
Hey, thanks. Do you have a blog?
Hi Stavros – thank you for the information about Dodona. I was told by a well-known ‘celebrity’ psychic that I had a past life their as one of the barefoot priestesses who lived at the Oracle of Zeus interpreting the rustling of the leaves to visitors seeking answers and guidance. I am just researching the history of the site and gathering photos as I plan to visit one day as part of my journey.
Best wishes for your journey
Claire
Hi Claire
Sometimes those rusting leaves come as emails / posts. I was just taking a break from brain storming some ideas for a novel. One of the ideas that arrived fresh on the page was a woman Survivor from another world who crashes into ours. Don’t know if I’d use it, but in my break, I get your message!
Out of the blue, a message from a high priestess of Dodona. Time does not matter when it comes to stuff like this.
Best wishes on your journey – maybe you’d like to post some of your photos here … Photos from a Dodona High priestess 🙂
stavros
Very unique concepts involving the over all pattern of life and all it’s little crevices of hidden truths.I am a research astrologer that involved Gematria in combination with a persons personal astrological chart where words and phrases could be extracted . I did work on known world events and had few pieces published but no one very interested in the work. I think it was to involved and no way to make it a simple ,maybe two paragraph explanation.
mch
Hi
Thanks for your kind thoughts.
I’m thinking about posting some of my ideas concerning mundane events. Right now I’m looking at my country’s Prime Minister’s chart and will be layering it with Australia’s horoscope to see if there are any clues as to what may happen in next year’s election.
I would love to read some of your work. Is it possible for you to email some to me? Who knows there may be a synchronistic connection between your Gematria and the events that are happening in my and your life. My email is dodona777@yahoo.com.au
stavros
Very great post. I just stumbled upon your blog and wanted to mention that I’ve really enjoyed surfing around your weblog posts. After all I’ll
be subscribing for your rss feed and I’m hoping you write once more soon!
I am extremely impressed with your writing skills as well as with the layout on your weblog. Is this a paid theme or did you customize it yourself? Anyway keep up the excellent quality writing, it’s rare to see a great blog like this one nowadays..
Thanks for your kind comments. I didn’t pay for the theme it’s one of those freebies with WordPress.
Hi Stavros I am working on series which includes a story on refugees at Woomera. Can u plse contact me
I sent you an email but you mau not have received it yet. Please write to dodona777@yahoo.com.au
Greetings, I think the Universe present us with information, and different types of information, according to how well we can understand them, and by using the best means they can, specially with this digital era. I have no idea how I found this page, but I was reading on Greek oracles, mythology, and spirituality (as I connect with it strongly) and….your journey and words are beautiful. I’m grateful for your sharing of information. I have being meaning to go back to visit Greece because there are still signs calling me there. Thank you very much for being it!
Hello Marina
Thank you for your kind words. I don’t live in Greece but I was born there and migrated to Australia when I was 4 years old with my parents. Though I don’t live in Greece physically I feel I am living there within my heart when I revisit stories of the soul and mythology. I will return to Greece once again in the near future.
I am glad you see the importance of using diverse forms of information to position one self in the Universe. Take Astrology as an example – people will say that it has no credibility within the scientific mindset. This is true but what these people seem to forget is that correlation is not causation. The astrology skeptics do not understand that just because planets are in a certain position when an event happens on Earth does not mean that the planetary pattern CAUSED the event. What it means is that at the same time an event happens on Earth a certain planetary pattern occurs. This CORRELATION is only meaningful to those who are open to the meaning of that moment. This is NOT scientific – it is more poetic.
All the best in your journey and please stay in touch.
G’day Stavros,
I’ve been enjoying your remarkable blog, which immediately made it clear you had a lot more on the ball that I did, insight-into-humanity-and-the universe-wise, though I’m getting tired of all this past tense (even if it is grammatically correct, referring to something that already happened).
My first thought was, “Okay, if this bloke’s so into people and history and spirituality and so on, why does he live in what seems like the most distant spot on the planet (except maybe Antarctica, and definitely even in that direction)?” Then I realized: In order to have truer, uninterrupted insights into these kinds of things, one requires solitude, or at least the option of uncrowded beaches.
My only question (which I’m about to introduce with a colon) is: Being way down there in the Southern Hemisphere (which I understand, being half of the planet, is considered a proper noun, and thus capitalized), aren’t a lot of things turned around backwards, much as how water goes down the drain in the opposite direction? Could that pose any challenges to one’s interpretations of reality? I mean, it’s all so subjective to begin with. I have enough trouble remembering which leg goes into which side of my pants in the morning, so I can only imagine what it may be like having to make such left-or-right, up-or-down decisions all day long.
But I’ve said too much, haven’t I? (You can’t tell, but rather than typing this, I’m dictating it with voice-recognition software, whose accuracy is quinoa flange manicotti.) Keep up the fine work. If I ever get the world figured out up on this half of it, I’ll be sure to let you know, as it’ll probably also apply to what’s down there, just the other way around.
Your fellow member of the Commonwealth (being in Canada, and therefore speaking roughly the same language), Andy
Hi Andy
Thanks for your kind comments. Living in Australia we don’t feel isolated or far away from anything because we do have BIG metropolises – Sydney, Melbourne. When you venture out of the big bubbles of activity that’s when you feel how big & “empty” Australia is. I felt that strongly while travelling through Central Australia. Stephen King, the author, once said, while motorcycling that he felt you could hear God breathe out in Central Australia.
Rene Daumal wrote that he felt he was great Inside Out Man, (see post about him in my blog). Well, maybe I’m the great Upside Down Man 🙂 In terms of isolation, I used to get away from the crowds when I was about 20 every few months by going to this beautiful place in the bush about 100 kms away from Sydney, where I’d stay under this big rock ledge that felt like it was a cave. I’d be there for about a week, fasting for the first 3 or 4 days, then eating my provisions of sultanas & nuts. I found it interesting that even though all I did for the day was light a fire, go for walks & swim in the beautiful rock pool time just swept away. Alone & with my thoughts, I’d have lots of interesting times just watching the antics in my head.
Again, thanks for your response. Now to visit your blog…
Stavros
I came across your deep-dives while tracking back to Suarez’s Cipher… I’m a retired r(25 years ago) rogue professor of sociology. My quest has been for am eclectic participatory (e.g. CAT-scan)
Liberation Sociology. Suarez code – Undifferentiated energy by containers of all kinds – caught my interest. I too go in and out. Most every morning I rise in the dark, make a coffee, and sit and sip while an undirected flow just happens. I use the concept of paradigm as my outside framework. Its dynamic comes from he contrast of the established “Coperican” paradigm, basically an ugly and destructive monoculture with the paradigm of perennial wisdoms. While ery promising, it is hard to sell to all sleepyheads.
DeLIGHTed. to meet up with yo, and your fellows
Hello Thomas – thanks for writing. There’s not many who are into Suarez’s Cipher so it is wonderful to meet someone who is. I’m a retired Teacher who was a manager of multicultural education programs for the last 20 years. So, dealing with a diverse community & designing educational programs for that community has helped in my somewhat eclectic approach to knowledge and understanding. You are right about the beige monoculture of the established “Copernican” paradigm but at least there’s some of us who wish to add a bit of colour.
Delighted to meet you too.
Thank you Stavros, for sharing your thoughts. I really enjoyed reading your words and feel, at the age of seventy-two, that I need to reach out to like-minded souls to add richness to my life.
I am a meditator as well. There are so many ways to find peace. The now is so precious. 🙏
Thank you Jen for reading my stuff. Yes, the NOW is precious as it is all we have.