- Time of past OR future Camino
- First one in 2005 from Moissac, France.
Note to moderators - this is not a discussion on religion in any way, merely background to a point I would like to make about attitude on Camino - just my point of view of course.
Hi all. There was a post recently that may still be going on - (and to which my reply would probably have been seen as somewhat rude by some .. a wake up and snap out of it response which I have now edited) and it was by a sadly unhappy person .. unhappy because their Camino was completely unlike their expectations ... and this really can be a problem ... to go there with expectations, plans, pre-conceived ideas about how it will be out there - if the Camino, as pilgrimage, is anything it is stepping off the cliff into the unknown .. a something that, unless we make it a guided package holiday, we have to be open to and ready to take all as it comes.
As Frank Zappa once said "a mind is like a parachute, if it isn't open it doesn't work"
Anyway ... I was reading some Minot Savage just now - my go-to theological reads. A 19th century minister located on the east coast of America, a leading Unitarian, and a great speaker, a great thinker, a great man ... I read and re-read his works often.
I noticed this and although I have read it many times this time it seemed apt for attitude and awareness on Camino ... to be aware, to be ready to engage with 'what is' not what one wants ... to make the most of each thing that happens .. to see .
(works with life generally too )
Ref: Our Unitarian Gospel, Minot Judson Savage, Reprint, first published 1898 - Pge 78
Hi all. There was a post recently that may still be going on - (and to which my reply would probably have been seen as somewhat rude by some .. a wake up and snap out of it response which I have now edited) and it was by a sadly unhappy person .. unhappy because their Camino was completely unlike their expectations ... and this really can be a problem ... to go there with expectations, plans, pre-conceived ideas about how it will be out there - if the Camino, as pilgrimage, is anything it is stepping off the cliff into the unknown .. a something that, unless we make it a guided package holiday, we have to be open to and ready to take all as it comes.
As Frank Zappa once said "a mind is like a parachute, if it isn't open it doesn't work"
Anyway ... I was reading some Minot Savage just now - my go-to theological reads. A 19th century minister located on the east coast of America, a leading Unitarian, and a great speaker, a great thinker, a great man ... I read and re-read his works often.
I noticed this and although I have read it many times this time it seemed apt for attitude and awareness on Camino ... to be aware, to be ready to engage with 'what is' not what one wants ... to make the most of each thing that happens .. to see .
(works with life generally too )
Ref: Our Unitarian Gospel, Minot Judson Savage, Reprint, first published 1898 - Pge 78
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