Beautiful village. Thanks for sharing Mr. Socks. I find that which each passing year my determination of to find JOY and loveliness in the most inconsequential and mundane aspects of life increases 'exponentially' - probably aware of the passing years and a refusal to give in to the current situation.
Clifton Hampden is very picturesque. You have a lot of villages like that over there. This one is like stepping back into a Medieval village. And you had the perfect background music for the scenery. That's an awesome old church. Lovely stained glass. The word "suffer" in early modern English meant to allow something or to tolerate an action. When Jesus said, "Suffer the little children," he then said to let them come to him and be blessed, not to hinder them, because the Kingdom of Heaven belongs to them. It doesn't mean to make them suffer in today's meaning. Just as Bible saying, "Suffer fools gladly," means to tolerate them gladly. What a lovely 94-year-old woman you met at the cemetery.
Ironic that the church has been the greatest cause of suffering for children for 1600 years at least. And that's not even counting the wars, the strife and the civil wars caused by basically identical religions arguing about who should have total authoritarian control. And now political parties are doing the same without even the excuse of God.
@@SocksWithSandals It's not religion, per se. As you said, it's an "excuse." It was more about greed and power. Yes, just like the politicians of today. I'm a Christian but I don't attend a church because I can't really find one that teaches what I believe based on my own reading of the Bible. For example, I don't believe in a future tribulation, which, no doubt, many will bash me for. Just as in the Medieval Period, I believe the next religious agenda is Judgment Day.
I'm sure if you read all of your Bible as I have that you would find more of it unethical, immoral and preposterous. It's the true literal believers of religions that are the most dangerous people.
I used to take the dog for a walk round there. Did you go to the barley mo? Nice pub i celebrated new year there, once, many moons ago. And the cottage you stopped to say 'oh yes' to (5.05) was my friend's house back in the 80s.
I think those flowers are Prunus Fuji cherry blossom and the blue plant is Chinese blue bell? Great to hear your getting some clarification about work! Lovely to see your videos!
Beautiful village. Thanks for sharing Mr. Socks. I find that which each passing year my determination of to find JOY and loveliness in the most inconsequential and mundane aspects of life increases 'exponentially' - probably aware of the passing years and a refusal to give in to the current situation.
Indeed.
The world is full of beauty.
What a lovely church. Thanks for the tour. Fantastic video mr socks.
The trick is short clips and changes of angle even on the talking head sections
@@SocksWithSandals I like your style of videos. They flow and keep you interested and are very addictive.
...someone give that phonebox a lick of paint! ...it part of our modern day cultural heritage.
Red phone boxes were made in 1924.
Not that modern.
Absolutely love the bird song.x
A lot of the houses had bird feeders to encourage it
Nice place. Some people don't even notice the coming & going of the insects. Or nature for that matter.
It's a life half lived if you can't appreciate the beauty in the world every day
Pretty village,I’ve never heard of it,I must make a point of going there.Thanks Tim.
I knew you would enjoy that little walkabout, Richard.
Clifton Hampden is very picturesque. You have a lot of villages like that over there. This one is like stepping back into a Medieval village. And you had the perfect background music for the scenery.
That's an awesome old church. Lovely stained glass.
The word "suffer" in early modern English meant to allow something or to tolerate an action. When Jesus said, "Suffer the little children," he then said to let them come to him and be blessed, not to hinder them, because the Kingdom of Heaven belongs to them. It doesn't mean to make them suffer in today's meaning. Just as Bible saying, "Suffer fools gladly," means to tolerate them gladly.
What a lovely 94-year-old woman you met at the cemetery.
Ironic that the church has been the greatest cause of suffering for children for 1600 years at least.
And that's not even counting the wars, the strife and the civil wars caused by basically identical religions arguing about who should have total authoritarian control. And now political parties are doing the same without even the excuse of God.
@@SocksWithSandals It's not religion, per se. As you said, it's an "excuse." It was more about greed and power. Yes, just like the politicians of today.
I'm a Christian but I don't attend a church because I can't really find one that teaches what I believe based on my own reading of the Bible. For example, I don't believe in a future tribulation, which, no doubt, many will bash me for. Just as in the Medieval Period, I believe the next religious agenda is Judgment Day.
I'm sure if you read all of your Bible as I have that you would find more of it unethical, immoral and preposterous.
It's the true literal believers of religions that are the most dangerous people.
I used to take the dog for a walk round there. Did you go to the barley mo? Nice pub i celebrated new year there, once, many moons ago. And the cottage you stopped to say 'oh yes' to (5.05) was my friend's house back in the 80s.
Small world. No, I'm not really into pubs anymore.
@@SocksWithSandals Eh? Your Dorchester video says otherwise young man...
Restaurants. I don't go to pubs or hotels without restaurants.
@@SocksWithSandals The Barley Mo serves food. Or used to.
I think those flowers are Prunus Fuji cherry blossom and the blue plant is Chinese blue bell? Great to hear your getting some clarification about work! Lovely to see your videos!
It's a pretty messy zero-hours contract
What a lovely video Tim ,such a beautiful place.
Living in the van doesn't mean I'm in a rush to get "home", so I can saunter through the B-roads and come across these villages.
It was the anniversary of Waterloo on the 18th funnily enough.
A really beautiful place, dont think i will ever be able to afford one of those cottages!
You can always go there and enjoy them for free
@@SocksWithSandals yes that would be a reward in its self!
Красивая деревушка)
I would love to spend a year driving around Russia looking at beautiful villages.
...2 weeks ...2 months ...or 2 years
Never.
Unless we take our freedom back ourselves.
This is a lovely video Socks
Great video ❤️👍😊
The United Kingdom is so lovely.
I'm talking to you, Sturgeon.
Chocolate Box
Just about any still from that film would make a beautiful cover for for a jigsaw puzzle box.
That ply is Iike gold dust to the Americans at the moment .. And probably us too soon.
Soon there will be a scarcity of food
Oh they going to blame it on EU citizens going back even though they didn't have to?
...is anyone keeping track of insects? ...I feel there been a steep decline in numbers these last few decades
Wrong channel to be asking that question.
Magnificent. Enjoyed that one. Your music choice is always on point.
I'm glad you appreciate the work I put into making these videos. The music helps me to convey how I was feeling at the time.
🐄 mooo
Oh...
... K