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Pathway to Spirit
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Phsyical Mediumship Tyne And Wear
Blaydon-On-Tyne Boldon Colliery Gateshead Houghton Le Spring Newcastle - Upon Tyne North Shields Ryton Sunderland Washington Whitley Bay - Phsyical Mediumship Tyne And Wear Find a circle
News on Physical Mediumship in your area.
Pathway to Spirit, via Joan Hughes is committed to promoting physical mediumship. Over the coming months we intend to expand the website to include articles on physical mediums, some well known, for example , and other mediums, less well know. These county pages will be devoted to local groups where physical mediumship is of interest, and also provide a place for publication of physical circle activity. Please feel free to send us an update from you circle's activities and let us have any news or articles you think relevant to physical mediumship. Contact Joan Hughes for advice on sitting in physical circles. See also information on the development circle at Swadlincote Spiritualist Church..
Notice Board for this Area Nothing to post for this area as yet. In the meantime here is an extract from one of my favorite books, "The Power of Now".
I suppose that it takes two to make a relationship into a spiritual practice, as you suggest. For example, my partner is still acting out his old patterns of jealousy and control. I have pointed this out many times, but he is unable to see it. How many people does it take to make your life into a spiritual practice? Never mind if your partner will not cooperate. Sanity - consciousness - can only come into this world through you. You do not need to wait for the world to become sane, or for somebody else to become conscious, before you can be enlightened. You may wait forever. Do not accuse each other of being unconscious. The moment you start to argue, you have identified with a mental position and are now defending not only that position but also your sense of self. The ego is in charge. You have become unconscious. At times, it may be appropriate to point out certain aspects of your partner's behavior. If you are very alert, very present, you can do so without ego involvement - without blaming, accusing, or making the other wrong. When your partner behaves unconsciously, relinquish all judgment. Judgment is either to confuse someone's unconscious behavior with who they are or to project your own unconsciousness onto another person and mistake that for who they are. To relinquish judgment does not mean that you do not recognize dysfunction and unconsciousness when you see it. It means "being the knowing" rather than "being the reaction'' and the judge. You will then either be totally free of reaction or you may react and still be the knowing, the space in which the reaction is watched and allowed to be. Instead of fighting the darkness, you bring in the light. Instead of reacting to delusion, you see the delusion yet at the same time look through it. Being the knowing creates a clear space of loving presence that allows all things and all people to be as they are. No greater catalyst for transformation exists. If you practice this, your partner cannot stay with you and remain unconscious. If you both agree that the relationship will be your spiritual practice, so much the better. You can then express your thoughts and feelings to each other as soon as they occur, or as soon as a reaction comes up, so that you do not create a time gap in which an unexpressed or unacknowledged emotion or grievance can fester and grow. Learn to give expression to what you feel without blaming. Learn to listen to your partner in an open, nondefensive way. Give your partner space for expressing himself or herself. Be present. Accusing, defending, attacking - all those patterns that are designed to strengthen or protect the ego or to get its needs met will then become redundant. Giving space to others - and to yourself - is vital. Love cannot flourish without it. When you have removed the two factors that are destructive of relationships: When the pain-body has been transmuted and you are no longer identified with mind and mental positions, and if your partner has done the same, you will experience the bliss of the flowering of relationship. Instead of mirroring to each other your pain and your unconsciousness, instead of satisfying your mutual addictive ego needs, you will reflect back to each other the love that you feel deep within, the love that comes with the realization of your oneness with all that is. This is the love that has no opposite. If your partner is still identified with the mind and the pain-body while you are already free, this will represent a major challenge - not to you but to your partner. It is not easy to live with an enlightened person, or rather it is so easy that the ego finds it extremely threatening. Remember that the ego needs problems, conflict, and "enemies" to strengthen the sense of separateness on which its identity depends. The unenlightened partner's mind will be deeply frustrated because its fixed positions are not resisted, which means they will become shaky and weak, and there is even the "danger" that they may collapse altogether, resulting in loss of self. The pain-body is demanding feedback and not getting it. The need for argument, drama, and conflict is not being met. But beware: Some people who are unresponsive, withdrawn, insensitive, or cut off from their feelings may think and try to convince others that they are enlightened, or at least that there is "nothing wrong" with them and everything wrong with their partner. Men tend to do that more than women. They may see their female partners as irrational or emotional. But if you can feel your emotions, you are not far from the radiant inner body just underneath. If you are mainly in your head, the distance is much greater, and you need to bring consciousness into the emotional body before you can reach the inner body. If there isn't an emanation of love and joy, complete presence and openness toward all beings, then it is not enlightenment. Another indicator is how a person behaves in difficult or challenging situations or when things "go wrong." If your "enlightenment" is egoic self-delusion, then life will soon give you a challenge that will bring out your unconsciousness in whatever form - as fear, anger, defensiveness, judgment, depression, and so on. If you are in a relationship, many of your challenges will come through your partner. For example, a woman may be challenged by an unresponsive male partner who lives almost entirely in his head. She will be challenged by his inability to hear her, to give her attention and space to be, which is due to his lack of presence. The absence of love in the relationship, which is usually more keenly felt by a woman than a man, will trigger the woman's pain-body, and through it she will attack her partner - blame, criticize, make wrong, and so on. This in turn now becomes his challenge. To defend himself against her pain-body's attack, which he sees as totally unwarranted, he will become even more deeply entrenched in his mental positions as he justifies, defends himself or counterattacks. Eventually, this may activate his own pain-body. When both partners have thus been taken over, a level of deep unconsciousness has been reached, of emotional violence, savage attack and counterattack. It will not subside until both painbodies have replenished themselves and then enter the dormant stage. Until the next time. This is only one of an endless number of possible scenarios. Many volumes have been written, and many more could be written, about the ways in which unconsciousness is brought out in male-female relationships. But, as I said earlier, once you understand the root of the dysfunction, you do not need to explore its countless manifestations. Let's briefly look again at the scenario I have just described. Every challenge that it contains is actually a disguised opportunity for salvation. At every stage of the unfolding dysfunctional process, freedom from unconsciousness is possible. For example, the woman's hostility could become a signal for the man to come out of his mind-identified state, awaken into the Now, become present - instead of becoming even more identified with his mind, even more unconscious. Instead of "being" the pain-body, the woman could be the knowing that watches the emotional pain in herself, thus accessing the power of the Now and initiating the transmutation of the pain. This would remove the compulsive and automatic outward projection of it. She could then express her feelings to her partner. There is no guarantee, of course, that he will listen, but it gives him a good chance to become present and certainly breaks the insane cycle of the involuntary acting out of old mind patterns. If the woman misses that opportunity, the man could watch his own mental-emotional reaction to her pain, his own defensiveness, rather than being the reaction. He could then watch his own pain-body being triggered and thus bring consciousness into his emotions. In this way, a clear and still space of pure awareness would come into being - the knowing, the silent witness, the watcher. This awareness does not deny the pain and yet is beyond it. It allows the pain to be and yet transmutes it at the same time. It accepts everything and transforms everything. A door would have opened up for her through which she could easily join him in that space. If you are consistently or at least predominantly present in your relationship, this will be the greatest challenge for your partner. They will not be able to tolerate your presence for very long and stay unconscious. If they are ready, they will walk through the door that you opened for them and join you in that state. If they are not, you will separate like oil and water. The light is too painful for someone who wants to remain in darkness. Why Women Are Closer To Enlightenment Are the obstacles to enlightenment the same for a man as for a woman? Yes, but the emphasis is different. Generally speaking, it is easier for a woman to feel and be in her body, so she is naturally closer to Being and potentially closer to enlightenment than a man. This is why many ancient cultures instinctively chose female figures or analogies to represent or describe the formless and transcendental reality. It was often seen as a womb that gives birth to everything in creation and sustains and nourishes it during its life as form. In the Tao Te Ching, one of the most ancient and profound books ever written, the Tao, which could be translated as Being, is described as "infinite, eternally present, the mother of the universe." Naturally, women are closer to it than men since they virtually "embody' the Unmanifested. What is more, all creatures and all things must eventually return to the Source. `All things vanish into the Tao. It alone endures." Since the Source is seen as female, this is represented as the light and dark sides of the archetypal feminine in psychology and mythology. The Goddess or Divine Mother has two aspects: She gives life, and she takes life. When the mind took over and humans lost touch with the reality of their divine essence, they started to think of God as a male figure. Society became male dominated, and the female was made subordinate to the male. I am not suggesting a return to earlier female representations of the divine. Some people now use the term Goddess instead of God. They are redressing a balance between male and female that was lost a long time ago, and that is good. But it is still a representation and a concept, perhaps temporarily useful, just as a map or a signpost is temporarily useful, but more a hindrance than a help when you are ready to realize the reality beyond all concepts and images. What does remain true, however, is that the energy frequency of the mind appears to be essentially male. The mind resists, fights for control, uses, manipulates, attacks, tries to grasp and possess, and so on. This is why the traditional God is a patriarchal, controlling authority figure, an often angry man who you should live in fear of, as the Old Testament suggests. This God is a projection of the human mind. To go beyond the mind and reconnect with the deeper reality of Being, very different qualities are needed: surrender, nonjudgment, an openness that allows life to be instead of resisting it, the capacity to hold all things in the loving embrace of your knowing. All these qualities are much more closely related to the female principle. Whereas mind-energy is hard and rigid, Being-energy is soft and yielding and yet infinitely more powerful than mind. The mind runs our civilization, whereas Being is in charge of all life on our planet and beyond. Being is the very Intelligence whose visible manifestation is the physical universe. Although women are potentially closer to it, men can also access it within themselves. At this time, the vast majority of men as well as women are still in the grip of the mind: identified with the thinker and the pain-body. This, of course, is what prevents enlightenment and the flowering of love. As a general rule, the major obstacle for men tends to be the thinking mind, and the major obstacle for women the pain-body, although in certain individual cases the opposite may be true, and in others the two factors may be equal. Phsyical Mediumship Tyne And Wear
Extracts from Robert Monroe's Journey's out of the Body What about nonresistance in the face of violence, aggression, and the like? Nonresistance doesn't necessarily mean doing nothing. All it means is that any "doing" becomes nonreactive. Remember the deep wisdom underlying the practice of Eastern martial arts: don't resist the opponent's force. Yield to overcome. Having said that, "doing nothing" when you are in a state of intense presence is a very powerful transformer and healer of situations and people. In Taoism, there is a term called wuwei, which is usually translated as "actionless activity' or "sitting quietly doing nothing." In ancient China, this was regarded as one of the highest achievements or virtues. It is radically different from inactivity in the ordinary state of consciousness, or rather unconsciousness, which stems from fear, inertia, or indecision. The real "doing nothing" implies inner nonresistance and intense alertness. On the other hand, if action is required, you will no longer react from your conditioned mind, but you will respond to the situation out of your conscious presence. In that state, your mind is free of concepts, including the concept of nonviolence. So who can predict what you will do? The ego believes that in your resistance lies your strength, whereas in truth resistance cuts you off from Being, the only place of true power. Resistance is weakness and fear masquerading as strength. What the ego sees as weakness is your Being in its purity, innocence, and power. What it sees as strength is weakness. So the ego exists in a continuous resistance-mode and plays counterfeit roles to cover up your "weakness," which in truth is your power. Until there is surrender, unconscious role-playing constitutes a large part of human interaction. In surrender, you no longer need ego defenses and false masks. You become very simple, very real. "That's dangerous," says the ego. "You'll get hurt. You'll become vulnerable." What the ego doesn't know, of course, is that only through the letting go of resistance, through becoming "vulnerable," can you discover your true and essential invulnerability. Transforming Illness Into Enlightenment If someone is seriously ill and completely accepts their condition and surrenders to the illness, would they not have given up their will to get back to health? The determination to fight the illness would not be there any more, would it? Surrender is inner acceptance of what is without any reservations. We are talking about your life - this instant - not the conditions or circumstances of your life, not what I call your life situation. We have spoken about this already. With regard to illness, this is what it means. Illness is part of your life situation. As such, it has a past and a future. Past and future form an uninterrupted continuum, unless the redeeming power of the Now is activated through your conscious presence. As you know, underneath the various conditions that make up your life situation, which exists in time, there is something deeper, more essential: your Life, your very Being in the timeless Now. As there are no problems in the Now, there is no illness either. The belief in a label that someone attaches to your condition keeps the condition in place, empowers it, and makes a seemingly solid reality out of a temporary imbalance. It gives it not only reality and solidity but also a continuity in time that it did not have before. By focusing on this instant and refraining from labeling it mentally, illness is reduced to one or several of these factors: physical pain, weakness, discomfort, or disability. That is what you surrender to - now. You do not surrender to the idea of "illness." Allow the suffering to force you into the present moment, into a state of intense conscious presence. Use it for enlightenment. Surrender does not transform what is, at least not directly. Surrender transforms you. When you are transformed, your whole world is transformed, because the world is only a reflection. We spoke about this earlier. If you looked in the mirror and did not like what you saw, you would have to be mad to attack the image in the mirror. That is precisely what you do when you are in a state of nonacceptance. And, of course, if you attack the image, it attacks you back. If you accept the image, no matter what it is, if you become friendly toward it, it cannot not become friendly toward you. This is how you change the world. Phsyical Mediumship Tyne And Wear 47 Arthurs Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Newcastle Upon Tyne) - Bill Quay-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Black Callerton-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Blackhall Mill-Tyne And Wear (Near Consett) - Blaydon Burn-Tyne And Wear (Near Prudhoe) - Blaydon On Tyne-Tyne And Wear (Near Newcastle Upon Tyne) - Boldon Colliery-Tyne And Wear (Near Jarrow) - Brunswick Village-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Brunton Bridge-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Carr Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Colliery Row-Tyne And Wear (Near Chester Le Street) - Denton Burn-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Easington Lane-Tyne And Wear (Near Houghton Le Spring) - East Boldon-Tyne And Wear (Near South Shields) - East Denton-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - East Herrington-Tyne And Wear (Near Sunderland) - East Rainton-Tyne And Wear (Near Chester Le Street) - Eighton Banks-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Forest Hall-Tyne And Wear (Near Wallsend) - Great Usworth-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Harlow Green-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Herrington Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Washington) - Hetton Le Hole-Tyne And Wear (Near Seaham) - High Felling-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - High Mickley-Tyne And Wear (Near Prudhoe) - High Spen-Tyne And Wear (Near Prudhoe) - Houghton Le Spring-Tyne And Wear (Near Washington) - Kenton Bank Foot-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Kingston Park-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Lea Bailey Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Gateshead) - Lintz Green-Tyne And Wear (Near Consett) - Lobley Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Gateshead) - Low Eighton-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Low Fell-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Low Urpeth-Tyne And Wear (Near Chester Le Street) - Marley Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Gateshead) - Monkton Village-Tyne And Wear (Near Jarrow) - Murton Village-Tyne And Wear (Near Whitley Bay) - New Herrington-Tyne And Wear (Near Washington) - New Silksworth-Tyne And Wear (Near Sunderland) - New York-Tyne And Wear (Near Whitley Bay) - Newcastle Upon Tyne-Tyne And Wear - North Hylton-Tyne And Wear (Near Washington) - North Shields-Tyne And Wear - North Walbottle-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Old Ravensworth-Tyne And Wear (Near Gateshead) - Percy Main-Tyne And Wear (Near North Shields) - Rowland'S Gill-Tyne And Wear (Near Prudhoe) - Seaton Burn-Tyne And Wear (Near Cramlington) - Sheriff Hill-Tyne And Wear (Near Gateshead) - Shiney Row-Tyne And Wear (Near Washington) - South Denton-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - South Gosforth-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - South Hylton-Tyne And Wear (Near Sunderland) - South Shields-Tyne And Wear - South Wellfield-Tyne And Wear (Near Whitley Bay) - Spital Tongues-Tyne And Wear (Near Newcastle Upon Tyne) - Springwell Village-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - St Anthonys-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - West Allotment-Tyne And Wear (Near Whitley Bay) - West Boldon-Tyne And Wear (Near Jarrow) - West Denton-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - West Herrington-Tyne And Wear (Near Washington) - West Jesmond-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - West Mickley-Tyne And Wear (Near Prudhoe) - West Moor-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Whitley Bay-Tyne And Wear - Whorlton Grange-Tyne And Wear (Near Gosforth) - Willington Quay-Tyne And Wear (Near North Shields) - Windy Nook-Tyne And Wear (Near Felling) - Winlaton Mill-Tyne And Wear (Near Gateshead) - Great Livermere-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Great Saxham-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Great Waldingfield-Suffolk (Near Sudbury) - Great Wenham-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Great Whelnetham-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Great Wratting-Suffolk (Near Haverhill) - Hadleigh Heath-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Hanchet End-Suffolk (Near Haverhill) - Haughley Green-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - High Street Green-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - High Street (Suffolk Coastal)-Suffolk (Near Dunwich) - High Street (Waveney)-Suffolk (Near Aldeburgh) - Holes Hole-Suffolk (Near Woodbridge) - Holton St Mary-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Holywell Row-Suffolk (Near Mildenhall) - Hulver Street-Suffolk (Near Beccles) - Ilketshall St Andrew-Suffolk (Near Beccles) - Ilketshall St John-Suffolk (Near Bungay) - Ilketshall St Lawrence-Suffolk (Near Halesworth) - Ilketshall St Margaret-Suffolk (Near Bungay) - Ixworth Thorpe-Suffolk (Near Thetford) - Kingshall Street-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Lady'S Green-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Lindsey Tye-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Linstead Parva-Suffolk (Near Halesworth) - Little Bealings-Suffolk (Near Woodbridge) - Little Blakenham-Suffolk (Near Needham Market) - Little Bradley-Suffolk (Near Haverhill) - Little Cornard-Suffolk (Near Sudbury) - Little Finborough-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Little Glemham-Suffolk (Near Wickham Market) - Little Larkhill-Suffolk (Near Colchester) - Little Saxham-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Little Stonham-Suffolk (Near Needham Market) - Little Thurlow-Suffolk (Near Haverhill) - Little Waldingfield-Suffolk (Near Sudbury) - Little Wenham-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Little Whelnetham-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Little Whittingham Green-Suffolk (Near Harleston) - Little Wratting-Suffolk (Near Haverhill) - Long Melford-Suffolk (Near Sudbury) - Long Thurlow-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Lower Hacheston-Suffolk (Near Woodbridge) - Lower Holbrook-Suffolk (Near Harwich) - Lower Somersham-Suffolk (Near Needham Market) - Market Weston-Suffolk (Near Thetford) - Martlesham Heath-Suffolk (Near Woodbridge) - Mendlesham Green-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Middlewood Green-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Mill Common-Suffolk (Near Halesworth) - Moats Tye-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Monk Soham-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Monks Eleigh-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Nedging Tye-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Needham Market-Suffolk North Cove-Suffolk - North Cove-Suffolk (Near Beccles) - North Stow-Suffolk (Near Thetford) - Old Felixstowe-Suffolk (Near Felixstowe) - Old Newton-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Onehouse-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Oulton Broad-Suffolk (Near Lowestoft) - Pixey Green-Suffolk (Near Harleston) - Polstead Heath-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Poystreet Green-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Preston St Mary-Suffolk (Near Stanstead) - Red Lodge-Suffolk (Near Mildenhall) - Ringsfield Corner-Suffolk (Near Beccles) - Ringshall Stocks-Suffolk (Near Needham Market) - Rougham Green-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Rushmere St Andrew-Suffolk (Near Ipswich) - Santon Downham-Suffolk (Near Brandon) - Saxtead Green-Suffolk (Near Saxmundham) - Sedge Fen-Suffolk (Near Mildenhall) - Shimpling Street-Suffolk (Near Stanstead) - Shingle Street-Suffolk (Near Felixstowe) - Shippea Hill-Suffolk (Near Ely) - Shotley Gate-Suffolk (Near Harwich) - Shotley Street-Suffolk (Near Harwich) - Silverley'S Green-Suffolk (Near Harleston) - Silverleys Green-Suffolk (Near Harleston) - South Cove-Suffolk (Near Southwold) - St Cross South Elmham-Suffolk (Near Harleston) - St James South Elmham-Suffolk (Near Halesworth) - St Margaret South Elmham-Suffolk (Near Bungay) - St Michael South Elmham-Suffolk (Near Bungay) - Stanton Street-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Stoke Ash-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Stoke By Clare-Suffolk (Near Haverhill) - Stoke By Nayland-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Stone Street-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Stonham Aspal-Suffolk (Near Needham Market) - Stratford St Andrew-Suffolk (Near Saxmundham) - Stratford St Mary-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Suffolk-Antrim (Near Belfast) - Thistley Green-Suffolk (Near Mildenhall) - Thorington Street-Suffolk (Near Hadleigh) - Thornham Magna-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Thornham Parva-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Thorpe Green-Suffolk (Near Frinton On Sea) - Thorpe Morieux-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Thurston End-Suffolk (Near Sudbury) - Timworth Green-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Tuddenham (Bury St Edmunds)-Suffolk (Near Mildenhall) - Ubbeston Green-Suffolk (Near Halesworth) - Upper Holton-Suffolk (Near Halesworth) - Walsham Le Willows-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Ward Green-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - West Row-Suffolk (Near Mildenhall) - West Stow-Suffolk (Near Bury St Edmunds) - Wetherup Street-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Wickham Green-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Wickham Market-Suffolk (Near Woodbridge) - Wickham Skeith-Suffolk (Near Eye) - Wickham Street-Suffolk (Near Stanstead) - Willingham St Mary-Suffolk (Near Beccles) - Winston Green-Suffolk (Near Needham Market) - Withersdale Street-Suffolk (Near Harleston) - Wyverstone Street-Suffolk (Near Stowmarket) - Rock Green-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Ruyton Xi Towns-Shropshire (Near Oswestry) - Seifton Batch-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Shoot Hill-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Shray Hill-Shropshire (Near Newport) - Skyborry Green-Shropshire (Near Knighton) - St Martins-Shropshire (Near Oswestry) - St Martin'S Moor-Shropshire (Near Oswestry) - Standford Bridge-Shropshire (Near Newport) - Stanton Lacy-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Stanton Long-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - Stanton Upon Hine Heath-Shropshire (Near Wem) - Stanwardine In The Field-Shropshire (Near Wem) - Stanwardine In The Wood-Shropshire (Near Ellesmere) - Steel Heath-Shropshire (Near Whitchurch) - Stoke St Milborough-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Stoke Upon Tern-Shropshire (Near Market Drayton) - Stonewall Hill-Shropshire (Near Knighton) - Stoney Stretton-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Street Dinas-Shropshire (Near Ellesmere) - Stretton Heath-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Stretton Westwood-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - Sutton Heath-Shropshire (Near Market Drayton) - Sutton Hill-Shropshire (Near Dawley) - Sutton Maddock-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - Sutton Wood-Shropshire (Near Dawley) - Tetchill Moor-Shropshire (Near Ellesmere) - The Bank-Shropshire (Near Dawley) - The Corner-Shropshire (Near Bishop'S Castle) - The Dean-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - The Down-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - The Hem-Shropshire (Near Telford) - The Hobbins-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - The Home-Shropshire (Near Bishop'S Castle) - The Wyke-Shropshire (Near Telford) - Tong Norton-Shropshire (Near Albrighton) - Tref Ar Clawdd-Shropshire (Near Oswestry) - Upper Affcot-Shropshire (Near Bishop'S Castle) - Upper Battlefield-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Upper Cound-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Upper Dinchope-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Upper Hayton-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Upper Ludstone-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - Upper Millichope-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Upper Walton-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Upton Cressett-Shropshire (Near Bridgnorth) - Upton Magna-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Vernolds Common-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Walford Heath-Shropshire (Near Shrewsbury) - Wall Under Heywood-Shropshire (Near Ludlow) - Waters Upton-Shropshire (Near Newport) - Welsh End-Shropshire (Near Whitchurch) - Welsh Frankton-Shropshire (Near Ellesmere) - West Felton-Shropshire (Near Oswestry) - Weston Heath-Shropshire (Near Newport) - Weston Lullingfields-Shropshire (Near Wem) - Weston Rhyn-Shropshire (Near Oswestry) - Wheat Leasows-Shropshire (Near Telford) - Whitcott Keysett-Shropshire (Near Bishop'S Castle) - Wood Lane-Shropshire (Near Ellesmere) - Wrekin Course-Shropshire (Near Telford) - Wrockwardine Wood-Shropshire (Near Telford) - Yorton Heath-Shropshire (Near Wem) - &Nbsp; - &Nbsp; -
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