
There’s a concept within Celtic Christianity that I appreciate — “thin places.” A thin place is a location where the distance between ordinary life and something larger feels somehow thinner. Some people would describe this as a sacred experience. Others might describe it as mystery, transcendence, deep connection, or simply feeling profoundly alive and awake to the world.
Often, people speak this way about certain types of places: remote islands, monasteries, mountains, coastal cliffs, or pilgrimage sites. Certain places seem to hold this feeling more easily. We might speak about them as if a veil between this reality and something larger has become more permeable there.
Lately, I’ve been wondering whether there can also be an experience of “thin time.” This is not a place we visit, but an era of life that carries this same feeling — moments when life suddenly feels more vivid, connected, and meaningful.
These kinds of experiences might especially emerge during life transitions. Maybe they are periods where old structures in our lives are crumbling while new possibilities are quietly emerging. Maybe they are times when we feel unusually connected to what matters most — even in the midst of uncertainty or change.
Of course, many seasons of life do not feel this way at all. Sometimes life feels repetitive, exhausting, or numbing. Sometimes we are simply trying to make it through the week while carrying responsibilities, grief, stress, caregiving, work, parenting, or the relentless pace of the world around us.
But there may also be periods where something within us becomes especially attentive. Some people may experience this as spiritual or supernatural. Others may simply feel more connected to what matters most — the deepest parts of themselves, care for loved ones, or to a renewed sense of possibility.
Whatever language we use, I wonder if many of us know this feeling.
Have you had an experience of thin time?
—Renee Roederer















