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Jim McCrory

Who Are the Travellers Who Pass This Way?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Wednesday 11 March 2026 at 08:35

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Who Are the Travellers Who Pass This Way?

With the first shy signs of spring appearing along Scotland’s west coast, my wife and I took a drive over to Loch Lomond at the weekend. The air still carried the coolness of winter, yet the light had begun to soften in that subtle way which hints that the season is turning.

As I stood looking across the water, I noticed two swans resting quietly on the loch, perhaps a metre apart. For a while they drifted there in silence. Then, quite suddenly, they rose together, their wings beating loudly against the still air, lifting themselves upward as though setting out on some long and purposeful journey.

I watched them with a sense of quiet wonder. Which of the two had first suggested it was time to leave? There had been no visible signal, no call, no movement that I could detect. It seemed almost like telepathy — a silent understanding shared between them.

Later, as we walked along the promenade at Duck Bay, with the quiet majesty of Ben Lomond standing watch across the water, my wife asked a question that gently drew my thoughts in another direction.

“How many visitors were on the website last night?”

“Seven and a half thousand,” I replied.

She paused for a moment, then said, “Who might these people be? What countries are they from?”

“That,” I said, “is a good question — one I wish I knew.”

In this rather one-sided act of blogging, I often find myself reflecting on that very mystery. Words are written in solitude, yet they travel far beyond the quiet room in which they were first formed. Somewhere, across towns and cities, across countries and oceans, someone pauses long enough to read them.

In a curious way, it reminds me of something from my childhood.

When I was a boy on the cusp of youth, I owned a Grundig Satellite multiband radio. Growing up around Clydeside, the outside world often arrived through the voices of sailors passing through the docks. But that radio opened the world in another way. In the evenings I would tune across the bands, discovering distant stations that seemed to arrive from beyond the horizon.

One evening I found a German station playing music. Among the pieces they broadcast was Beethoven’s Ode to Joy. I remember sitting there, listening in the dim glow of the dial, feeling unexpectedly lifted by the sound travelling invisibly through the air.

Perhaps that early experience planted a quiet fascination in me — the idea that voices and thoughts can travel across great distances to reach people we may never meet.

And so I find myself wondering about those who arrive here.

Why do you come, dear friends?

Perhaps the answer lies in something deeply human — our shared search for meaning, for the spiritual, for those quiet questions that sit beneath the surface of everyday life. Questions about existence, about the moral nature of humanity, and about the enduring place of Christian belief in a restless world.

Whatever your reasons, I am sincerely grateful for your visits. Yet I cannot help feeling curious about the people behind the numbers — who you are, where you live, and what led you here.

If you ever feel inclined, I would be delighted to hear from you. You can write, in complete confidence, to:

blogger2026ou@gmail.com

It would be a pleasure to know a little more about the fellow travellers who pass by this small corner of the world.

Perhaps in the great purpose of God, we may one day meet,

“After this I looked, and there before me was a great multitude that no one could count, from every nation, tribe, people and language, standing before the throne…”

Revelation 7:9

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