- Time of past OR future Camino
- Francés x 5, Le Puy x 2, Arles, Tours, Norte, Madrid, Via de la Plata, Portuguese, Primitivo
I did not want to hijack @Rebekah Scott's thread on the future of Camino Hospitality, so hence this one.
In that thread, @Mark Lee said, among other things:
I kinda like being able to get a hot shower, clean (actual) bed/bunk, hot meal and cold beer everyday while walking the Camino. I have no desire to suffer. Live austerely. Been there, done that and bought the t-shirt. Not looking to do it on holiday. Yup folks. Walking the Camino is a holiday. You sure as hell ain't working. If you ain't working you are either retired or on holiday.
I know that the word "holiday" originates from Holy Day, but today that we divide activity into "work" or "holidays" purely on the basis of financial reward, simply underscores our basic consumerism. It is the philosophy of the market.
The camino is (or used to be) about another and different paradigm.
I think the market philosophy is way too simplistic, in any case. Why should activity be defined as "work" only if it is paid in coin? I doubt there is a single parent in the world who would agree with that. I enjoy some activities, for which I am paid, as much as some for which I am not paid. And vice versa. For me there is little relationship between the two.
Some societies and languages do not have a word that equates to "work". They simply have words that describe an activity.
I can assure you, that when I am on camino, I work very hard. My exhausted body tells me that every night.
It all seems terribly limiting to value everything in terms of money.
In that thread, @Mark Lee said, among other things:
I kinda like being able to get a hot shower, clean (actual) bed/bunk, hot meal and cold beer everyday while walking the Camino. I have no desire to suffer. Live austerely. Been there, done that and bought the t-shirt. Not looking to do it on holiday. Yup folks. Walking the Camino is a holiday. You sure as hell ain't working. If you ain't working you are either retired or on holiday.
I know that the word "holiday" originates from Holy Day, but today that we divide activity into "work" or "holidays" purely on the basis of financial reward, simply underscores our basic consumerism. It is the philosophy of the market.
The camino is (or used to be) about another and different paradigm.
I think the market philosophy is way too simplistic, in any case. Why should activity be defined as "work" only if it is paid in coin? I doubt there is a single parent in the world who would agree with that. I enjoy some activities, for which I am paid, as much as some for which I am not paid. And vice versa. For me there is little relationship between the two.
Some societies and languages do not have a word that equates to "work". They simply have words that describe an activity.
I can assure you, that when I am on camino, I work very hard. My exhausted body tells me that every night.
It all seems terribly limiting to value everything in terms of money.