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Bringing awareness

biloute

Active Member
Time of past OR future Camino
Chemin du Puy & Camino Francés (summer 2014), Chemin du Puy & Camino Francés (possible summer 2019)
For those of you who are currently planning or have already completed their Camino in order to bring awareness to a chosen issue, what did you do to accomplish this? Obviously the media would have to be involved in some way, but what else?
 
Get a spanish phone number with Airalo. eSim, so no physical SIM card. Easy to use app to add more funds if needed.
Hello,

I'd like to attempt to answer, but my simple mind doesn't understand the question. Would you re-state your question?

Maybe it's this?: What do we do to let others know we are walking?

I'm sorry if seems foolish. This happens to me a lot.
 
More like what is it that actually brings awareness? Just telling the media you're walking for a certain purpose? Do you get donations of a certain amount for every mile walked? Do you somehow get others involved? Etc.
 
The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
Thank you. Now I understand better and appreciate the patience.
 
More like what is it that actually brings awareness? Just telling the media you're walking for a certain purpose? Do you get donations of a certain amount for every mile walked? Do you somehow get others involved? Etc.

I live in a small Spanish community where many people know eachother. I put an article about my camino in our local magazine, that actually appeared whilst I was walking. I walked with my daughter and as plans progressed I thought that if I was doing something 'out of the ordinary' I might as well try to raise some money for charity. We have a cancer hospice that is well known locally and I chose this as the beneficiary of any funds raised. I have to say that I find asking people for money rather embarrassing, but my partner has no such qualms and so he was nominated chief fundraiser and carried a sponsorship form with him at all times.

People sponsored me a set amount for the walk, and pledges ranged from 5 - 50 euros. I wrote a a daily blog from the camino and many of the sponsors signed up to it. I continue to post about life here in rural Spain. I eventually handed 900 euros to the charity, known as Cudeca. I was amazed at the generosity of my friends, acquaintances, and even strangers.

I also wanted to enable family and friends in the UK to sponsor me if they wished and set up a 'Just Giving' page in favour of Macmillan Nurses. Because I am not so good at 'rattling a tin', and merely told people about the possibility to contribute this way, I did not raise a great deal, eventually closing the collection at about £250.

So I would definitely recommend an enthusiastic supporter to do the collecting on your behalf if you are, like me, a bit backward in coming forward (to quote an appropriate British phrase). I also wrote a follow up piece for the magazine, but I think that although both articles were well received, they didn't help much towards the raising of funds - a face-to-face approach is much more successful!

Good luck, and buen camino
 
I am the secretive type. I only tell my immediate family. Awareness. Surely that's between you and your next step. I never ever would accept donations.
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
Enter/win an essay contest:


Me, God and Blisters on the Camino de Santiago
By: Donna Warenko

Posted: 12/26/2013



Signs in Spanish villages and towns along the Camino point the way for pilgrims to Santiago de Compostela, the cathedral site at the end of the trail. With story by Andrew Renton for CanWest Travel Package. (Photo by Andrew Renton/Special to Edmonton Journal)

The guidebook advertises three albergues in this village, but as I walk past one, and then another, locked door, my heart drops. One more chance and it's more than 16 kilometres to the next town. Three's the charm as the door opens on the third refuge.

I find myself in a dark, cold room with a bare wooden table and a bench for me to sit as I wait. Eventually an old Spaniard arrives. He speaks no English, of course, but he smiles a wide and toothless grin.

"Cuånto cuesta?" I ask. "Diez." Ten euros is the cost for a bed, and that includes dinner. Even if I could converse with this man, I have no further questions to ask. We both know I am staying here, no matter what. I pay, and he stamps my passport -- proof that I walked this way today. He shows me to a room with 30 beds, but so far I am the only one.

I am a Peregrina, on an ancient pilgrimage in northern Spain. I am walking some 800 kilometres, from St. Jean Pied de Port, France, through the Pyrennees, the Meseta and the Galician mountains, to the cathedral in Santiago de Compostela. I am alone; it is March and winter in this part of Spain. There are others walking this pilgrimage, people from all corners of the world, but tonight I have taken yet another opcion (alternative route) and am alone. I am more than 500 kilometres into my journey, most of those on painfully blistered feet.

I've come here for something, to find myself, maybe to find God. Tonight, though, I am only interested in finding a place to stop for the night, a meal and a bed.

Like those of a true Gypsy, my stops are unique but familiar. I pull off my boots and leave them at the door with my hiking poles. Even the filthiest stops do not allow boots inside. I hobble like an old woman to a bunk bed, picking the one closest to the door -- easier to make an early escape in the morning should others arrive, although I'm not expecting anyone. I extract my valuables and washing supplies from my pack and immediately go looking for the shower.

Seven p.m. and I'm still alone. Looks like another quiet, peaceful evening. I'm clean and warm, sitting by a wood stove in a cosy kitchen with my iPod, texting Ray back home before he goes to work. It's morning in Canada. The Wi-Fi is excellent -- modern meeting ancient. Toothless man pours me a glass of wine and leaves.

I am explaining to Ray that I am in a creepy ghost town, alone with an old man who is plying me with wine, when suddenly he comes back with a syringe. I know immediately what he wants to do. "Love you, Ray," I text, "but toothless man has a syringe and I'm pretty sure he's about to do some surgery on me. Adios, amigo and I'll send you an email after dinner."

Sure enough, he gestures to the puss-filled, golf ball-sized blister on my left heel which makes it near to impossible to put my boot on every morning and makes my eyes tear with agony for the first and last hour of the walk each day. He is going to drain it. Why didn't I think of this? It seems like SUCH a good idea!

I voluntarily give up my foot to this stranger and he sucks the puss out for me. One, two three -- I lost count of how many syringes full of vile fluid he pulls out. I am not exaggerating the size of my wound. When he is finally done, I feel so optimistic. Tomorrow will be a sweet day. There is nothing but a pile of useless skin hanging from that cause of so much pain now.

"Infecciòn," he says and I understand immediately. "Si, si," I nod. It is important to prevent infection now that he has opened up the skin. I am prepared. I have antibiotic cream with me. I purchased it at the farmacia in Pamplona, just as the blisters were beginning to form. We smile at each other, both comfortable now.

Suddenly there is a burst of blinding pain. My entire leg is on fire. I am holding back the screams but I can't hold back the tears. Crying uncontrollably, I realize we did, in fact, not understand each other at all. He has injected my open sore with iodine.

"Perigrina, Lo siento," he murmurs and this strange, old man begins to massage my leg. He has some sort of cream and he is murmuring and massaging, and I am crying and letting him, and wondering what else he has in store for me in this lonely outpost.

I don't know how long we two sat there in front of the wood stove, me weeping and him murmuring and massaging, but eventually the pain subsided. The man got up and prepared dinner, chicken paella. We sat in silence together and ate and drank a bottle of wine and smiled at each other. When we were done he gave me an electric heater -- the first heater I'd seen on this journey. I carried it to my dorm room, still all mine, and plugged it in. I pulled three blankets off the neighbouring beds and climbed into my own sleeping bag. Within minutes I was asleep and oblivious.

The next morning, as I pulled my boot on without pain I couldn't help but smile and think, now this is going to make for a good story one day.

Maybe I've come here to find courage, or maybe joy. Last night was the courage, but today's walk is joyous without the pain. Hours later I stopped at a local bar for my café con leche and pastry and connected to the Wi-Fi they offered. There were the frantic emails from Ray. Sorry, baby, forgot all about you last night.

This is the first of five winning entries in the 2013 Winnipeg Free Press/Writers' Collective Non-Fiction Contest. It can also be found at winnipegfreepress.com.
 
For those of you who are currently planning or have already completed their Camino in order to bring awareness to a chosen issue, what did you do to accomplish this? Obviously the media would have to be involved in some way, but what else?
I walked the Camino de la Plata and Augusta, from Cadiz to Santiago 1,200 km in Sept-Nov 2013, and raised $A8.500, for Prostate Cancer Awareness and Research. This was carried out with support from the Cancer Council of Queensland. Yes did use media, but the funds came from many friends around the world, who donated and some pledged based on X$ per km.

Pilgrim Rick

Go in Peace
Author of;
“The Spanish Pyrenees Adventure(GR11)” and
Camino de Santiago – A Pilgrims Walk for Prostate Cancer Awareness”
Available Amazon.com or Lulu Publishing. Profits to Cancer Research.
 
I'm thinking of putting something on a pilgrim "business card," with a link to my blog (thinking of putting a paypal donate button on it). And maybe having a bunch of teal ribbons to pass out along the way.
 
A selection of Camino Jewellery
I live in a small Spanish community where many people know eachother. I put an article about my camino in our local magazine, that actually appeared whilst I was walking. I walked with my daughter and as plans progressed I thought that if I was doing something 'out of the ordinary' I might as well try to raise some money for charity. We have a cancer hospice that is well known locally and I chose this as the beneficiary of any funds raised. I have to say that I find asking people for money rather embarrassing, but my partner has no such qualms and so he was nominated chief fundraiser and carried a sponsorship form with him at all times.

People sponsored me a set amount for the walk, and pledges ranged from 5 - 50 euros. I wrote a a daily blog from the camino and many of the sponsors signed up to it. I continue to post about life here in rural Spain. I eventually handed 900 euros to the charity, known as Cudeca. I was amazed at the generosity of my friends, acquaintances, and even strangers.

I also wanted to enable family and friends in the UK to sponsor me if they wished and set up a 'Just Giving' page in favour of Macmillan Nurses. Because I am not so good at 'rattling a tin', and merely told people about the possibility to contribute this way, I did not raise a great deal, eventually closing the collection at about £250.

So I would definitely recommend an enthusiastic supporter to do the collecting on your behalf if you are, like me, a bit backward in coming forward (to quote an appropriate British phrase). I also wrote a follow up piece for the magazine, but I think that although both articles were well received, they didn't help much towards the raising of funds - a face-to-face approach is much more successful!

Good luck, and buen camino

.....Camino Frances with my daughter: http://magwood.wordpress.com


This is so wonderful, Magwood. A really great reason to walk the camino over and over!
 

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