@CirrusTheCloud, many members of the forum will - and have - reply that the solution is to start planning your next walk but I think this advice sometimes overlooks the gifts that the Camino gives us. You describe walking to Santiago as a life-changing experience, so it is understandable that in trying to adjust to life away from the Camino is accompanied by the 'effervescence', for want of a better word, that sometimes follows on from the return home and all this fizzing exhilaration needs time to settle so you are better able to reflect on the meaningfulness and learning gained from the walk to Santiago .
@mspath provided a link to a previous thread that offers thoughtful comments and wisdom that may be helpful, especially the post by
@SabineP. Perhaps instead of making immediate plans to return just now, take the time to let what you have brought home with you in terms of new perspectives, greater tolerance, increased self-worth, openness to others and a joy in venturing into the unknown with trust (and some planning of course). The wild birds sing as sweetly wherever you live and the flowers have the same beauty, as the poet WH Davies wrote:
What is this life, if full of care, we have no time to sit and stare.
No time to stand beneath the boughs, and stare as long as sheep and cows.
No time to see, when woods we pass
Where squirrels hide their nuts in grass.
No time to see in broad daylight, streams full of stars, like skies at night
Walking the Camino gives us that time.
My gifts from the Camino were all those things but also religious and spiritual prompting a reconnection with things previously gone adrift, but I do not assume that framework of motivation for you or others. Just wake each day and treasure where you are and the blessings that life has bestowed and of how the experience opened your eyes to things that before the Camino you merely glanced but did not see, visually and metaphorically. Perhaps consider it as a treasured book, paragraphs of which you can return to whenever you need to reconnect with what you learned about valuing yourself, treasuring life and our interaction with other people.
But after all that I have no doubt that you will walk to SdC again, so Buen Camino!