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Do you set an “intention” for your Camino?

CTLawGal

Active Member
Time of past OR future Camino
April-May 2023
April-May 2025
Walking a Camino in 2025? I am starting my second in April 2025 and thinking about what intention to set. And also wondering if others set intentions for their Camino? Do you change your intention from Camino to Camino, or stick with the same one?

I discovered this Forum shortly before I began my first Camino, with the plan to walk the Norte to Oviedo, then the Primitivo and finishing with Finisterre and Muxia over the course of 42 days. I came across a post with an excerpt from Father Richard’s 1983 talks on pilgrimage, which I found incredibly meaningful because, while I’m not Catholic or particularly religious, it caused me to start thinking about walking my Camino with an “intent”. The thread was later shut down as it inspired a lot of angry responses on the now taboo topic of "pilgrim or tourist". However, this post is not intended as a violation of the new rule, but rather to ask, do you walk with intention?

I know people walk the Camino for many reasons, or for no reason, to just walk and see what happens along the way, so perhaps setting an intention isn’t necessarily helpful or applicable to everyone.

I hadn’t really given it much thought before I started, I was more caught up in packing (and repacking, and repacking again), and all the other pre-departure details. However, that post inspired me to examine why I was walking and what I hoped to accomplish. Before I read that post, I think I was mostly just hoping I would be able to finish! I was also hoping in some vague way for it to be a “spiritual” journey, not just a long trekking vacation. But I hadn’t really gone much further than in my thoughts than that, I wasn’t really thinking about how make a spiritual journey, it was just something I felt compelled to do.

My response to that post included this description of my intention:

“I feel that if I can wake every morning with gratitude in my heart, experience the beauty of where I am in each moment, let go of judging others, no matter how tired I feel or my feet ache, I will have accomplished what I set out to do, I will have approached the internal from the external.”

I kept thinking about this as my departure came closer, and once I started walking, I found myself articulating it slightly differently: that by waking each day with this kind of positive energy, I hoped it would create a kind of internal emotional “vibration” that I hoped I would be able to carry through to my day-to-day life off the Camino. Bringing that “best version of myself” that I often see others describe how they feel on Camino, back with me to my life at home. Looking back, I feel that setting that intention really made a difference in my pilgrimage; it became my polestar, and I did start to feel a kind of internal vibration.

I think I’ve been somewhat successful at maintaining that vibration, but I still see it as a practice, not something that you accomplish, rather something to keep working at. Somehow it seemed so much easier on the Camino where life is simplified into the basic components of walk, find food, be kind, find your destination, repeat. The Camino can be so powerful and a source of inspiration to keep improving our “best versions” – it’s definitely something to keep working on and going back to.

So, as I prepare for my next Camino in Spring 2025, I am thinking again about my intention, how should I walk? Do I need a new intention (and what would that be?), or continue with the one that worked so well for me on my first Camino? I’m leaning towards the latter, but I’ve modified it somewhat, encapsulating into fewer words so it can be a little like a mantra, but still with the hope of creating (or maybe deepening) that internal “vibration” and work towards that “better version”.

Wake in gratitude.
Be good, do good.
Open your heart to beauty.
Remember to smile.

So for now, that is my intention for my Camino.

I’m also hoping that by sharing mine, as the New Year approaches it will inspire you to think about it (as that post inspired me) to enhance your own Camino. And maybe give me other things to think about as I set mine.
 
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Walking a Camino in 2025? I am starting my second in April 2025 and thinking about what intention to set. And also wondering if others set intentions for their Camino? Do you change your intention from Camino to Camino, or stick with the same one?

I discovered this Forum shortly before I began my first Camino, with the plan to walk the Norte to Oviedo, then the Primitivo and finishing with Finisterre and Muxia over the course of 42 days. I came across a post with an excerpt from Father Richard’s 1983 talks on pilgrimage, which I found incredibly meaningful because, while I’m not Catholic or particularly religious, it caused me to start thinking about walking my Camino with an “intent”. The thread was later shut down as it inspired a lot of angry responses on the now taboo topic of "pilgrim or tourist". However, this post is not intended as a violation of the new rule, but rather to ask, do you walk with intention?

I know people walk the Camino for many reasons, or for no reason, to just walk and see what happens along the way, so perhaps setting an intention isn’t necessarily helpful or applicable to everyone.

I hadn’t really given it much thought before I started, I was more caught up in packing (and repacking, and repacking again), and all the other pre-departure details. However, that post inspired me to examine why I was walking and what I hoped to accomplish. Before I read that post, I think I was mostly just hoping I would be able to finish! I was also hoping in some vague way for it to be a “spiritual” journey, not just a long trekking vacation. But I hadn’t really gone much further than in my thoughts than that, I wasn’t really thinking about how make a spiritual journey, it was just something I felt compelled to do.

My response to that post included this description of my intention:

“I feel that if I can wake every morning with gratitude in my heart, experience the beauty of where I am in each moment, let go of judging others, no matter how tired I feel or my feet ache, I will have accomplished what I set out to do, I will have approached the internal from the external.”

I kept thinking about this as my departure came closer, and once I started walking, I found myself articulating it slightly differently: that by waking each day with this kind of positive energy, I hoped it would create a kind of internal emotional “vibration” that I hoped I would be able to carry through to my day-to-day life off the Camino. Bringing that “best version of myself” that I often see others describe how they feel on Camino, back with me to my life at home. Looking back, I feel that setting that intention really made a difference in my pilgrimage; it became my polestar, and I did start to feel a kind of internal vibration.

I think I’ve been somewhat successful at maintaining that vibration, but I still see it as a practice, not something that you accomplish, rather something to keep working at. Somehow it seemed so much easier on the Camino where life is simplified into the basic components of walk, find food, be kind, find your destination, repeat. The Camino can be so powerful and a source of inspiration to keep improving our “best versions” – it’s definitely something to keep working on and going back to.

So, as I prepare for my next Camino in Spring 2025, I am thinking again about my intention, how should I walk? Do I need a new intention (and what would that be?), or continue with the one that worked so well for me on my first Camino? I’m leaning towards the latter, but I’ve modified it somewhat, encapsulating into fewer words so it can be a little like a mantra, but still with the hope of creating (or maybe deepening) that internal “vibration” and work towards that “better version”.

Wake in gratitude.
Be good, do good.
Open your heart to beauty.
Remember to smile.

So for now, that is my intention for my Camino.

I’m also hoping that by sharing mine, as the New Year approaches it will inspire you to think about it (as that post inspired me) to enhance your own Camino. And maybe give me other things to think about as I set mine.
My intent will simply be to walk alongside with my Savior Jesus Christ, see and experience our journey together.
 
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I have my reasons for walking Caminos, and those reasons are enough for me. I do not "set" an intention upon starting one.

100%.
I think there is a real danger in over thinking this Camino thing :oops:

I just go and walk, with no specific intention or goal.
But I know that cool things will happen if I am open to it.......
 
On my next camino, my intention will be to lose the weight I have gained since my last one (oh the Holidays), and get back into hiking shape for a thru-hike in the USA.

Now it would be nice to do something to help someone or something along the way. But I don't set an intention for that, most often that is a "game time" decision and I never know when something like that is going to happen.

This one time.. I was told I "restored [a fellow walker's] faith in humanity".

I try not to set the bar so high as to expect that again.
 
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100%.
I think there is a real danger in over thinking this Camino thing :oops:

I just go and walk, with no specific intention or goal.
But I know that cool things will happen if I am open to it.......
I agree.

Being open to what happens. Seeing things and opportunities you might not normally notice. Being aware of assistance from Mushkil Gusha, the remover of difficulties.

The universe is large and you are small, but you ARE an integral part of it all.
 
I have my reasons for walking Caminos, and those reasons are enough for me. I do not "set" an intention upon starting one.

Idem for me.
Aside from that : all the things I would like to be/ do at home.
Being a decent person and be nice to others and myself.
If taking up as much culture and architecture on a Camino is an intention then yes that is something I would do. But I do the same when not on Camino.
 
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I started with the intention of completing it when I first headed out. I had a guidebook and little knowledge other than that of the movie. I came here to the forum later once I realised there were a lot of us

One thing I have learned while walking is the need for tolerance. Something I have taken back to the real world with me
 
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On my first Camino, my intention was to try to become a more patient person. As with most things I wish for, God gave me multiple opportunities to practice! I do think it helped although I am still generally not a very patient person.

Now my intention is just to live every day to the fullest either on or off the Camino. Who knows how many Caminos any of us has left in us, so I walk each one with the wonder and welcoming spirit as if it might be my last.
 
On my next camino, my intention will be to lose the weight

You beat me to it! Same.

I recommend the Camino Vadiniense for that intent: for the first time I got comments when I got back, some rather worried, saying I lost too much weight... (Vadiniense was part of a longer Camino but I heavily suspect that stretch took a toll on me)

Then again, after a few months one is back to being the old roly poly pudding as always...
 
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.
100%.
I think there is a real danger in over thinking this Camino thing :oops:

I just go and walk, with no specific intention or goal.
But I know that cool things will happen if I am open to it.......
Perhaps, yes… which is to say: totally agree that people overthink the pilgrimage on the caminos de Santiago… because it starts to tread into “wellness” aspirational culture stuff (self-improvement, some vague notion of enlightenment, things of that order…).
But “intention” has a very particular meaning in Catholic practice and is not about overthinking. Rather it is about paring down to clarity what the purpose is in anything that one does. Entirely possible that the choice of word in the OP speaks to this idea… in which case, it is not a hand-wringing angst at all.
At its simplest, it is to do everything you do in a way that honours our creation as children of God.
I will stop there knowing that I have wildly reduced a fairly nuanced tenet, but the forum rules make it difficult to do any better without treading into “discussion of religion”.
I think that one might say quite reasonably, though, that having the goal of reaching the cathedral and praying at the tomb of the saint would be intention enough…. Thought it would not carry the meaning contained within “intention” as it is used to mean something close to “prayer”.
That said, if one attends any of the pilgrim masses, if one attends any of the ACC sessions, if one receives the pilgrim blessing from a church or cathedral at the point of departure, then the idea of carrying your intentions to Santiago will be central to the purpose of the blessing.
So… yeah, I think we can overthink “intention”, but the concept can be quite sacred for some who are making their way… and for those who might follow an Ignatian practice, for example, then staying faithful to the intention will be a key part of the work of making the journey.
thing about all this is… I would never ask someone their intention and would only share mine in a setting designed for that purpose (i.e., at a pilgrim’s mass, or at one of the ACC sessions).
 
No expectations. Life happens, enjoy it! Hoping for much, but will take whatever comes my way.
 
Idem for me.
Aside from that : all the things I would like to be/ do at home.
Being a decent person and be nice to others and myself.
If taking up as much culture and architecture on a Camino is an intention then yes that is something I would do. But I do the same when not on Camino.
I just wanted to tell you that I had never seen or heard the word idem before. Had to google it. After I found the meaning I thought it was a really, really COOL word. I doubt I would ever use it as my friends (they are boys from The Bronx would give me a ton of s*#t for it. You probably don't know this as you are not a New Yorker from a working class neighborhood, This would be the the expected response from anybody on our street.
But regardless I love the word and thanks for using it!!! Happy New Year to you @SabsP!
 
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.
My intentions for my Camino will be to offer my Joys and Sufferings to the Immaculate Heart of Our Blessed Mother to use as she will.
 

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