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A World Re-Enchanted June 2026 – The Enchanted Road: A Tolkienian Spirituality of Daily Errands

One of the greatest shifts that occurs when moving from a modern magical worldview to a Tolkienian one is that nothing becomes magical because we impose meaning upon it. Rather, things become enchanted because we awaken to the meaning they already possess.

This distinction is fundamental.

In much of modern occultism, errands are considered interruptions to one’s “real” spiritual life. Grocery shopping, collecting prescriptions, driving across town, taking an Uber, waiting in queues—these are treated as spiritually empty intervals to be endured.

Within Tolkien’s Legendarium, such a division scarcely exists.

The world of Arda is not divided into sacred places and ordinary places. It is one great creation whose every stone participates, to varying degrees, in the Music of the Ainur. The question therefore is never:

“How do I make this errand magical?”

Instead it becomes:

 

“How do I learn to perceive the Music that is already present within this journey?”

 

The Philosophy of the Road

Nearly every great event in Tolkien begins with…

a journey.

Not a ritual.

Not a ceremony.

Not a temple.

A road.

The Shire Road.

The East Road.

The Greenway.

The Great East Road.

The hidden paths of Lórien.

The river Anduin.

The sea roads of the Teleri.

Movement itself becomes one of the primary images of spiritual life.

One is almost reminded of Bilbo’s words:

“The Road goes ever on and on…”

The road is never merely transportation.

It is participation.

Every journey is an opportunity to encounter Creation anew.

Thus a modern practitioner might gradually replace the thought:

“I have to run errands.”

with

“Today the Road has called.”

That subtle change transforms the experience.

 

The Four Free Peoples and the Daily Journey

 

Hobbits – The Pilgrimage of Neighborliness

 

Hobbits would never think of errands as productivity.

They would think of them as opportunities for relationship.

Running to the market means:

  • greeting familiar faces
  • asking after someone’s family
  • admiring gardens
  • stopping for tea
  • bringing something home for another

Their spiritual discipline would be presence.

A Hobbit might intentionally choose the slightly longer route simply because it passes the old oak they love.

The journey itself becomes hospitality.

Their question would be:

“Whom might I encourage today?”

 

Dwarves – Stewardship of Necessary Things

 

For Dwarves every errand is maintenance of civilization.

Obtaining groceries.

Replacing tools.

Collecting building supplies.

Repairing equipment.

Maintaining the vehicle.

These are acts that preserve order against entropy.

Every repaired machine delays decay.

Every maintained home honors Mahal.

A trip to purchase screws would carry genuine dignity.

Not because screws are important.

Because faithful craftsmanship is.

The Dwarf asks:

“How may I strengthen the foundations of my household today?”

 

Men – The Road of Purpose

 

Men understand that life is brief.

Therefore every journey possesses urgency—not frantic urgency—but intentionality.

Driving becomes practice in virtue.

Patience.

Mercy.

Self-control.

Humility.

Courtesy.

Instead of viewing traffic as interruption, it becomes training.

Every impatient driver becomes an unexpected teacher.

Every delay becomes an opportunity to cultivate endurance.

The road becomes a school of character.

 

Elves

The Elves perhaps transform errands the most profoundly.

They rarely hurry.

Not because they are slow.

Because they refuse to become unconscious.

Every journey becomes an act of observation.

Clouds.

Wind.

Water.

Birdsong.

Changing light.

The smell after rain.

An Elf notices these things without forcing them.

They are continually practicing remembrance.

To them the destination matters less than remaining awake throughout the journey.

 

Modes of Travel When Running Errands

 

Riding in an Uber

At first glance Uber appears profoundly mundane.

Yet Tolkien repeatedly demonstrates that strangers encountered upon the road often become important.

Consider:

  • wandering Rangers
  • chance meetings
  • unexpected hosts
  • mysterious travelers
  • Eagles appearing at unforeseen moments

The road is where providence frequently unfolds.

Thus entering an Uber could become an exercise in hospitality.

Before entering:

“May I bring peace into this small shared space.”

One need not preach.

One need not evangelize.

One simply becomes a pleasant passenger.

Patient.

Kind.

Grateful.

Listening.

Sometimes silent.

Sometimes conversational.

One never knows whose day may quietly improve.

 

Driving Yourself

Driving becomes stewardship.

The vehicle is no longer merely transportation.

It becomes something akin to a horse.

Not worshipped.

Not anthropomorphized.

Simply respected.

One keeps it clean.

Maintains it.

Drives gently.

Avoids needless aggression.

An Elf might even thank the vehicle—not because it possesses consciousness—but because gratitude shapes the soul.

 

Waiting at Traffic Lights

Modern culture views waiting as wasted time.

The Elves would disagree.

Waiting becomes stillness.

Observe.

Breathe.

Notice.

Listen.

One red light may reveal:

children laughing

birds gathering

sunlight upon buildings

clouds moving

wind through trees

The world continues singing while we wait.

 

Parking Lots

Perhaps nowhere feels less sacred.

Yet Tolkien constantly discovers beauty in overlooked places.

A practitioner might intentionally notice:

the weeds growing through concrete

small birds

changing weather

the sky reflected upon parked cars

the elderly person needing help returning a trolley

the parent struggling with children

Every parking lot contains opportunities for quiet kindness.

 

Shopping as Stewardship

Purchasing becomes an ethical act.

Questions arise:

Who crafted this?

Was it made well?

Will it last?

Can it be repaired?

Can I care for it?

The Elves especially would reject disposable culture.

Every purchase becomes an act of sub-creation.

Not merely consumption.

 

Spirituality of Returning Home and Knowing It will be Repeated Again Soon

 

Returning is just as important.

Many people mentally leave the journey before arriving.

The Tolkienian practitioner intentionally notices:

the familiar street

the home

the trees

the doorway

Crossing the threshold becomes a kind of homecoming.

One silently acknowledges gratitude for returning safely.

 

The Music of Repetition

One objection naturally arises.

“But I drive these same roads every day.”

Exactly.

So did the Elves.

Thousands of years.

The same woods.

The same rivers.

The same stars.

Yet repetition deepened perception.

It never exhausted it.

This is one of Tolkien’s great insights.

The world is inexhaustible.

Our attention is what becomes exhausted.

 

Becoming a Wayfarer Rather than a Consumer

Modern culture says:

“I am going to get things.”

Tolkien’s world whispers:

“I am travelling through Creation.”

The difference is immense.

The destination remains identical.

The soul arrives differently.

 

Conclusion: The Transformation

Ultimately, the goal is not to pretend that errands are extraordinary. Tolkien’s legendarium consistently reveals that the extraordinary is already woven through the ordinary. Frodo’s quest begins with an ordinary walk out of the Shire. Sam’s greatness is revealed through gardening, cooking, carrying burdens, and simply continuing down the road.

In a Tolkienian spirituality, the deepest enchantment is often found not in escaping everyday life but in recovering the ability to perceive it as part of the unfolding Music of Arda. Every journey—whether to the grocer, the chemist, a friend’s house, or an airport—becomes another verse in that Music. The road ceases to be an interruption to the spiritual life and becomes one of its principal classrooms, where patience, gratitude, stewardship, fellowship, and attentive wonder are quietly cultivated one mile at a time.

Monthly Correspondence — June

Full Moon: Isilnárië – Moon of Bright Fire (Solstice)
Valar: Varda
Holiday: June 21 – Tarnin Austa / Anar the Sun – Summer Solstice: the Gates of Summer (Gondolin)

Below is a Poem spoken in the books by Gildor Inglorion a Noldor Elf and company he was traveling with on their way back to Rivendell through the Shire and overheard by Frodo, Sam and Pippin.

Snow-white! Snow-white! O Lady clear!
O Queen beyond the Western Seas!

O Light to us that wander here
Amid the world of woven trees!

Gilthoniel! O Elbereth!
Clear are thy eyes and bright thy breath!
Snow-white! Snow-white! We sing to thee
In a far land beyond the Sea.

O stars that in the Sunless Year
With shining hand by her were sown,
In windy fields now bright and clear
We see you silver blossom blown!

O Elbereth! Gilthoniel!
We still remember, we who dwell
In this far land beneath the trees,
Thy starlight on the Western Seas.

Looking Ahead — July

Next month there are no holidays to be found on a Tolkien calendar but we will be examining another topic that is often overlooked by modern books on paganism but can definitely become more enchanted and that is Paying Bills. Another mundane task that together we will find a way to make an enchanted process. As we continue our journey to find A World – Re-Enchanted.

About the Author

The author is the founder and President of Way of Arda’s Lore, a Tolkien-based spiritual organization legally recognized in the United States. He is a husband and father, a long-standing practitioner of esoteric traditions, and a Freemason of sixteen years affiliated with the Blue Lodge, Scottish Rite, and York Rite bodies. He is also the owner of Mystical Source, a metaphysical business dedicated to the creation of spiritually aligned tools and practices.

His work is devoted to the restoration of meaning within daily life—to the recognition that the world, though diminished, is not without light.