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THIS HAPPENED TO ME

Weeping Willows’ Witching Effect

Seeing the beauty of this tree after decades of being cagey due to myths has made me cheery

Josephine Crispin

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A weeping willow photographed in England in late summer. It’s planted on the side of a man-made lake, a habitat for hundreds of waterbirds in any season

The weeping willow fascinates me.

It could be due to its name itself, weeping willow. Not exactly a happy label.

Or, I could have been influenced, though unwittingly, by myths and folklore surrounding this tree:

  • That it is a tree of enchantment
  • That witches’ brooms as per witchery practices are bound with a branch of a weeping willow
  • That it is connected to dark goddesses of the underground
  • The weeping willow is also associated with death, grief and cemetery
  • This was most likely in relation to the funerary flints, which resembled willow leaves, found in graves dating from the Old Stone Age
A willow tree in late autumn/early winter

How we look at trees, even people, changes in time

How I perceive weeping willows stuck with me for decades.

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