I’m just back from a two-part Camino. The Via Serrana from Gibraltar to Sevilla, and then the Invierno from Ponferrada. I am experiencing the standard post-camino letdown, so I thought I’d reflect a bit.
I have gone from walking the more popular caminos to the solitary ones, and maybe that has influenced (or maybe it just reflects) what the camino “means” for me nowadays. In my earlier days, it was all about the community, the sharing, the intense short-lived emotional bonds. I had many “camino families” over the years, and I’m still in touch with some of those people. But those experiences don’t happen on the Olvidado, the Ebro, the Levante, the Catalán, etc, and I found that my caminos sort of morphed into an opportunity for me to be completely in charge of myself with no one else’s needs to attend to (I am a caregive at home and it gets very stressful and hard on the spirits). An opportunity to disconnect, to challenge my physical limits, to be self-sufficient, to immerse myself in my surroundings while focusing on my own “inner stuff.”
I like the physical challenge and the opportunity to enjoy some of Spain’s amazing almost hidden cultural and historical sites. That’s why over the last few years I have spent a lot of time before walking identifying places near the camino that can be added in as detours — Roman ruins, waterfalls, Romanesque (and earlier) churches, monasteries, castles, etc. They all form part of the backdrop for me as I walk, and when I arrive at those places, I kind of break out of my inner cocoon and enjoy what they have to offer. That’s a very different kind of camino than when I started back in 2000. But what remains constant is the joyful gratitude I experience every single day as I reflect on how lucky I am to be doing this.
Just to say that not only is the Camino a very different thing for different people, but what the camino is for one person can and probably will change as the person changes and as the caminos change.
p.s. I’d love to hear others’ thoughts on this - especially if you’ve been walking caminos for many years.
I have gone from walking the more popular caminos to the solitary ones, and maybe that has influenced (or maybe it just reflects) what the camino “means” for me nowadays. In my earlier days, it was all about the community, the sharing, the intense short-lived emotional bonds. I had many “camino families” over the years, and I’m still in touch with some of those people. But those experiences don’t happen on the Olvidado, the Ebro, the Levante, the Catalán, etc, and I found that my caminos sort of morphed into an opportunity for me to be completely in charge of myself with no one else’s needs to attend to (I am a caregive at home and it gets very stressful and hard on the spirits). An opportunity to disconnect, to challenge my physical limits, to be self-sufficient, to immerse myself in my surroundings while focusing on my own “inner stuff.”
I like the physical challenge and the opportunity to enjoy some of Spain’s amazing almost hidden cultural and historical sites. That’s why over the last few years I have spent a lot of time before walking identifying places near the camino that can be added in as detours — Roman ruins, waterfalls, Romanesque (and earlier) churches, monasteries, castles, etc. They all form part of the backdrop for me as I walk, and when I arrive at those places, I kind of break out of my inner cocoon and enjoy what they have to offer. That’s a very different kind of camino than when I started back in 2000. But what remains constant is the joyful gratitude I experience every single day as I reflect on how lucky I am to be doing this.
Just to say that not only is the Camino a very different thing for different people, but what the camino is for one person can and probably will change as the person changes and as the caminos change.
p.s. I’d love to hear others’ thoughts on this - especially if you’ve been walking caminos for many years.