Another interesting thread with people recalling far more positive experiences than negative. There are many excellent posts above, excuse me if I just pick two.
I have been a "local" in a camino village since 2006. I see many many pilgrims passing through.
I often say hello or good morning or Buen Camino to them, and often as not I am ignored, or looked-at like I'm a weirdo! Sometimes I don't say hello. Sometimes my thoughts are elsewhere, or maybe I am in a bad mood, or I am distracted. Like the other people who live in this village, I have a life going on that is not always Pilgrim-focused.
Pilgrims are utterly pilgrim-focused. Your pilgrimage experience is yours. But the
Camino de Santiago is a real place on Planet Earth, and it belongs to all of us. This is not a show, and you are not the star. We all are here together, being humans, living our adventures and our ordinariness.
None of us owes anyone else anything beyond basic dignity. The locals along the Way shouldn't have to be friendly to the thousands of pilgrims who pass through. But remarkably, we often are.
This from Rebekah Scott just absolutely nails it.
I have been that local. I have been that privileged person that the baker serves first (because he knows my time is limited and I have my own customers to see to. And because he knows he will see me again tomorrow, and the day after, and the one after that).
And as a local you see dozens, even hundreds of new people every day - a percentage of whom are going to be: 1/ normal (forgettable ) 2/ pleasant 3/respectful 4/wonderful 5/ annoying 6/ completely obnoxious. And sadly human nature is such that we tend to concentrate on/remember the negative far more than the positive. (It's why the news always concentrates on the former not the latter.)
So it's even more remarkable than after seven or eight months that the Spanish generally remain not only friendly but extremely helpful in times of need. Or even perceived need.(redirecting me back to the camino even though I was deliberately seeking something else!).
You wanna know the funny thing? This might be totally anecdotal and borderline inappropriate, but I've had some candid conversations with hospitaleras/os... like native ones... they told me that pilgrims can be a PITA, and Spanish ones are the worst! Like even worse than Americans!
Yes, tourists from your own country are generally the worst. Why should pilgrims be any different?!!
During my traveling years I spent a couple of seasons working in the Greek islands. International backpackers were welcomed, Italians were warmly welcomed, and the Mainland Greeks? - they were given the cold shoulder!
Why? They think they should be treated like locals. The percentage of demanding, rude, even obnoxious behaviour is far higher.
By halfway through my first season I knew what they meant. By the end of my second it was an ingrained prejudice on my part too. Sad, but there it is.
As a hostel manager back home in New Zealand years later I sadly learnt that the same was true of my fellow countrymen. Not only that but incidences of Petty theft jumped markedly every time I had fellow kiwis in the hostel. ( Milk, bread etc from the fridge; cutlery and crockery going missing and so forth).
Which brings me back full circle. I think the Spanish are a wonderful, warm, welcoming people by nature, who, especially on the main camino routes, have to put up with an awful lot - and yet still are predominantly true to their nature.
And I for one am very grateful.