Why we walk the Camino

I read this post on one of the Camino Facebook groups, and the author gave me permission to copy it here.

Why we walk the Camino by Kirk Springer

A coworker asked me why people walk the camino. I answered every person has their own reason – some happy, some sad, some simply for the adventure. As I was walking this morning, my memories took me back to my first service in the cathedral at Santiago. We all meet pilgrims along the way, seeing them here and there and building a pilgrim community. Sometimes in the conversations, others will reveal the reason for their pilgrimage.

As service was about to start, a friend from Brazil pulled me aside to talk for a minute, and when I returned, I had lost my seat and was now several pews behind my pilgrim family. My eyes touched the back of their heads and I thought of their stories: this woman’s husband recently died of a heart attack, next to her is a younger woman who’s husband succumbed to cancer in his early 40s. Here is a priest who has taken off the cloth for a sabbatical and is walking as one of us to renew his strength. Here is an Australian actor, hoping to jump the pond and become a Hollywood superstar, who has shot a pilot in L.A. and is now burning nervous energy while he waits for the results. Here is a mother with a neurological disease who has only months until she is confined to a wheelchair, walking with her daughter for one last Hurrah. So many stories, so many reasons to be there.

And as I looked at them, I thought, “We all did it. We walked 500 miles through snow, rain, sunny days, laughs and tears so we could sit here before God.”

I wept. The girl beside me asked why, and when I shrugged, she started weeping too. The Australian actor asked what was wrong with us, and when we both shrugged, his face turned red as he struggled – but he wiped away the tears and said, “Nope. Not going to do it.” And he moved to another pew.

It was such a beautiful moment. To rephrase a classic quote, “There are a million stories on the camino.” Every day more are added.

Veterans on the Camino

Posted by a member of the American Pilgrims on the Camino Facebook Group:

Warriors on the Way is an organization that brings together combat veterans for a 180-mile walk across Spain on the Camino de Santiago, coupled with a structured program that has a moving and measurable impact on the healing of their PTSD and Moral Injury. (Within the context of military service, particularly regarding experiences of war, “moral injury” refers to the lasting emotional, psychological, social, behavioral, and spiritual impacts of actions that violate a service member’s core moral values and behavioral expectations of self or others.)

https://warriorsontheway.org/?fbclid=IwAR0R1H6mD5od-cs0OPbGq0LMSOSLF69dTL_SrUVW4QKZQS4QgvGeUt3IlGY

Veterans on the Camino also assists military veterans making an extraordinary journey towards healing on the Camino de Santiago.

Veterans on the Camino. Veterans on the Camino is a project that provides Veterans with the means and the resources to take the ancient pilgrimage known as the Camino de Santiago.  This 500 mile journey starts in southwestern France, follows the northwestern coast of Spain to Santiago de Compostella and ultimately ends at the coast.  The place people once considered to be the end of the earth.

https://www.facebook.com/VeteranswalkCamino/?show_switched_toast=0&show_invite_to_follow=0&show_switched_tooltip=0&show_podcast_settings=0&show_community_transition=0

Camino Frances Elevation Map

Camino Frances elevation map. Starting on the left at Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, France, the high peak is the path on which we cross over the Pyrenees Mountains into Spain. All those little peaks.. I promise you, don’t seem like little ups and downs when you’re huffing and puffing along.
And this is the path we walk on the Camino Frances. After 5-6 weeks of walking all day, and always walking west, the left arm and side of the face takes a beating in the sun!

Tortilla de patatas

On the Camino, I passed on the delightful pastries in favor of the protein and stick-to-your-ribs Spanish Tortilla. Ate it nearly every day and got pretty tired of it, that’s for sure. But it was a solid breakfast that kept a pep in my step for many kilometers. No sugar crashes!
https://spanishforcamino.com/2018/08/24/tortilla-de-patatas/?fbclid=IwAR3UNowLI6lwmdxKuU2ip0NeEP9_brViUDddZe5q_h3V69wVqQvDyYbdpQk
Click the link for the recipe!

Scotland’s Great Trails

Exploring Scotland’s Great Trails. Looking at three that connect, south to north: Clyde Walkway, West Highland Way, Great Glen Way. Total 344 km/ 215 miles. I’d go slow with a rest day between each trail, so would probably be about 23 days.
At least one region along the Camino Frances in Spain is closed until May. That means all those with spring plans will show up in the fall when I had planned. I’m thinking it will be an accommodation nightmare, so I’m looking at 2021 alternatives.
The map is taken from a Scotland Great Trails map.

https://www.scotlandsgreattrails.com/?fbclid=IwAR1mBJRNFCPsRzOmMn2RSeyfOPBQKL9o5lex0Hxq0fQ6DmIPcMteiYT5Kds