During June/July this year I walked the
Camino Frances from SJPdP to SdC. I met two Camino Angels during my pilgrimage - both of them during my first two days climbing the Pyrenees.
Angel #1: I commenced my pilgrimage on June 16, which unfortunately, also coincided with the onset of one of the worst storms to hit the Pyrenees in recent times - lashing winds, freezing cold rain and fog so thick I could barely make out my outstretched arm. I wasn't going far my first day - only to Orisson, but due to the bitterly cold wind and rain a chronic health issue flared and I really struggled, stopping more than a dozen times (weather reports had indicated I'd be walking during a heat wave, so I wasn't prepared for the cold - in hindsight a bad move on my part). Worse still, the circulation to my right arm was cut off due to my not adjusting my front backpack straps correctly and my arm swelled to the size of a sausage shaped balloon (I didn't notice this straight away because my whole body was numb from the cold).
Soaked to the bone and physically exhausted, I dumped my pack on the side of the road and slumped down onto a rock, prepared to give in (yep, give in), when out of the mist, just a few feet away, a woman appeared. As she approached, she asked if I was okay. Through my tears I showed her my arm and sobbed that I didn't think I could go any further. She knelt down beside me and took my arm and began gently massaging it. She said to me, "it isn't far now, it's really very close, you can make it". She left then. Walking away into the mist she just - disappeared. I lingered a few more minutes, but just as I stood up the mist separated directly in front of me (as if on queue) and there it was - the Orisson Albergue. It was literally just a few meters away from me! I met this same woman several more times during my time on the Camino and each time we met, we hugged, laughed and ‘reminisced’ about that 'awful' day. My Camino Angel also just happens to be a forum member as well!
Angel #2: Overnight at the Orisson Albergue my health condition became markedly worse and by the next morning I was seriously contemplating returning home. But, another Camino Angel came to the rescue. She loaned me her wet weather poncho (remember, I was only prepared for a heat wave and had no wet weather gear whatsoever) as she had a rain jacket and she offered to walk with me for the day to Roncesvalles. I was so ill I could only manage to walk a few steps at a time before having to rest. My Camino Angel stayed with me every step of the way. She encouraged me, made me laugh and generally diverted my attention from the miserable weather to the history of the Camino, the beauty of the area we were walking (not that we could see anything, the mist was so thick) and also her life story and her own personal connection with the Camino. For seven hours, we walked, climbed, slipped and slid in the wind and rain until we reached Roncesvalles. My Camino Angel and I have now become life-time friends and stay in touch regularly.
My turn: After spending time in hospital in Pamplona and recovering enough to continue my pilgrimage, the Camino began to really work its magic. Each day I walked I grew stronger and by the time I reached Rabanal del Camino I was feeling great. It was here, on the morning I left Rabanal and was heading to El Acebo that I came across an elderly woman standing beside the senda who appeared to be experiencing breathing difficulties. I thought of my Camino Angels and knew that I couldn’t just ask this woman if she was okay and then walk on. It was my turn to pay back the generosity and kindness that had been shown to me. I took this woman under my wing and together we walked to El Acebo. We spent twelve hours on the Camino that day as the woman’s health and fitness level were very poor and with the heat being so extreme the going was very slow. So many times I offered to flag down transport for her, but she was very adamant that she wanted to walk (I understood. I’d been there two weeks earlier). As we made our way down the final descent into El Acebo early that evening, pilgrims who had passed us along the Way during the day clapped us into town. We were met with cheers and two huge beers! God bless all the Camino Angels.