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Oh yeah! People at home are asking why all the time. I have some stock responses: I have a fascination for pilgrimage routes, I need some time for reflection, I like the challenge, the countryside is beautiful and I will pass through some of the prettiest little towns. One or two of those phrases is typically enough to satisfy people. The real reason I am going is, well, all of the above, and I am thinking about leaving my relationship and need the time and space away to think it over. I can't say this to those at home.Just my opinion, but if I were asked in a reasonably curious or polite manner, I would not be offended by the question. I mean I haven't left yet and people are asking me why.
That's a very good point!I wonder if the difference is that, when the questions are asked by a fellow traveller it is an exchange of information. When they are asked by a local the information flow is one way.
Beautiful response.As we say back home, I like to "read the room". I feel it's important to get a sense of the person or conversation before charging forward. However, many folks aren't wired to read and pick up social cues. I have pretty deep and involved reasons for walking my caminos, and quite frankly, not everyone deserves to hear my story.
An adjacent (and maybe not the best) example: I no longer automatically ask my fellow women "do you have children" or "are you married" while I'm on the camino...or for that matter, anywhere. Simple questions but often the answers ("yes, but my husband/partner died" or "a son, but they passed away") left me with the sense they may have divulged a painful memory they weren't necessarily ready to share with an overeager stranger. So I let folks open up to me and then go from there.
I know the feeling. People can’t fathom why you’d want to walk that far every day. My friend says why would you when it’s not the most beautiful scenery in the world. What I’ve learnt from my hiking group is everyone’s reasons to hike are different. Some just want to do hard hikes to lose weight, some only to see nice scenery, some like a full pack carry to get away from people, some like bagging peaks and ticking off the great hikes of the world. Not many are drawn to a pilgrimage. I have to explain that it’s not a hike as such and the reasons I’m drawn are not to do with scenery, fitness or tourism, but a personal calling for space and reflection, inspiration and possibly clarifying future direction. Not that interesting to many of my hiker friends..Just my opinion, but if I were asked in a reasonably curious or polite manner, I would not be offended by the question. I mean I haven't left yet and people are asking me why.
This is the answer of a veteran pilgrimSome people can't wait to tell you why they are on the Camino while others find the question intrusive and too personal. The problem is knowing which kind of person they are in advance.
Safest not to ask - let people volunteer their reasons if they are so inclined.
A lot of very good answers has been given to this question in this thread.I have a friend who asked everyone he met along the way why they walked the Camino. Another friend said it was a private thing and would have considered the question intrusive. Thoughts?
This will be me in many ways. I'm walking for a reason but I'll give a superficial albeit simple answer to satisfy a person for asking. I assure you the reason is deeper. Just depends on what mood I'm in but if I do share it with someone, it's because I've gotten comfortable with them.I can answer the "Why are you walking the Camino" question in a polite yet ambiguous fashion (which I have always done). I walk in solitude generally and use the time for introspection. And that is just me. The question that disturbs me when posed by perigrinos that I have just met is: "Do you believe in God?" I have been posed that question many, many times and I generally excuse myself from the discussion, shake their hands and say "Buen Camino." I have often wondered why an individual who does not have the slightest idea of who & what I am, would ask me such a personal and profound question.
I'm walking in part for religious reasons and I would still find that question really personal unless we'd been talking for a while and/or religious topics had already come up. I think my knee-jerk (and honest) answer would either be "Sometimes?" and/or "depends on how you define 'God?'"And I totally agree with your response to the "Do you believe in God?" question.
I love that. ‘Seeing myself as a part of a stream that has flowed for 1000 years’ Somewhat mystical.A lot of very good answers has been given to this question in this thread.
For me it will be a question about how I feel the day/moment I am given the question and by whom.
Sometimes I would given my reason, other times not.
But I think that when I give my reason, having walked many Caminos, I am focusing on the positive effect it has had on my life and the impact a Camino can have on any life.
To generalise walking a Camino to include people in the past as well as any human now, gives a more interesting answer than my own personal one.
And that may be an important part of my experiences on the Camino - the change of Ego and understanding of myself.
Seeing myself as a part of a stream that have flowed for 1000 years.
Lettinggo
sorta like me. I don't mind talking about religion. I just think directly asking someone can come off wrong. But if someone brings up they are walking for religious or spiritual reasons (and I'm one of those) I don't mind chatting but I just find the direct question sometimes comes across as judging. Might not be the intent but it comes across that way.I'm walking in part for religious reasons and I would still find that question really personal unless we'd been talking for a while and/or religious topics had already come up. I think my knee-jerk (and honest) answer would either be "Sometimes?" and/or "depends on how you define 'God?'"
I suppose context is everything; I can definitely imagine situations where I wouldn't mind the question at all. But you gotta walk carefully (pun intended) around that one.
Every day just go as far as you can see. When you get there, you will see further.…..I am feeling a little nervous and edgy about my trip that is now only 9 days away, what if I don't get an answer that I am hoping I get.
Your situation - or rather your mindset - mirrors my own these past few years. I'm 14 days away from my departure date, and I've been asking myself some of the same questions you are. I've come to the personal conclusion that I very likely won't get all the answers I'm hoping for, but I am really hoping that I at least have better insight into the questions, or perhaps just a sense of closure for some of the questions, without knowing the answers. But I'm bracing myself for the possibility that I end my walk more confused about my life and my future than I was when I beganIt is quite funny I should find this thread only now as it is quite relevant to what I am now going through and a question I am asking myself.
This past decade has been a tough one with plenty of adversity, the worst being the loss of my Mum after having MS for so long and a massive falling out with my Dad and loss of contact and having a relationship end, plenty of other stuff as well.
But I have handled it all and got through it only to find that I hit a wall in my life finally around last Christmas and within a very short period of time three mentions of the Camino came up from different sources and straight away I thought 35 days hiking across Northern Spain felt like something I just needed to do and hopefully find something inside me that I just cannot put my finger on as to what that "something" is.
I have put work on hold because right now I really do not care about finances or money at this time, without sounding too daft it is my soul I feel needs some attention and hopefully a few answers that will get me through the coming years if I am so lucky.
But tonight and for the first time I am feeling a little nervous and edgy about my trip that is now only 9 days away, what if I don't get an answer that I am hoping I get.
When we walked in 2014...when the dinosaurs still roamed...it was a standard topic of conversation on the Frances. None of our other pilgrimages had that as a topic. It's a good thought to have a simple answer that doesn't expose your whole psyche in case someone asks.I don't know as anyone has ever asked me this question while I was on camino. If they did, and I was in the mood to reply, I think that I might say "God only knows" and not enlarge on my answer.
You’re doing the right thing. But rather than « answers’ plan to think about the questions. I am currently on Day 30 of Le Puy and I think about what I need to let go of. Walking alone permits the time and space we never give ourselves at home. Things will happen for you. I noticed in the beginning a desire to cling to people (who clearly had the same desire) It meant I spent a lot of time chatting. But after four days I realized that wasn’t the point and I started walking alone. That’s when my head started clearing. As for the OPs question, very few people are so intrusive to ask. Most are genuinely interested why I came to France to walk as opposed to my reasons for walking.It is quite funny I should find this thread only now as it is quite relevant to what I am now going through and a question I am asking myself.
This past decade has been a tough one with plenty of adversity, the worst being the loss of my Mum after having MS for so long and a massive falling out with my Dad and loss of contact and having a relationship end, plenty of other stuff as well.
But I have handled it all and got through it only to find that I hit a wall in my life finally around last Christmas and within a very short period of time three mentions of the Camino came up from different sources and straight away I thought 35 days hiking across Northern Spain felt like something I just needed to do and hopefully find something inside me that I just cannot put my finger on as to what that "something" is.
I have put work on hold because right now I really do not care about finances or money at this time, without sounding too daft it is my soul I feel needs some attention and hopefully a few answers that will get me through the coming years if I am so lucky.
But tonight and for the first time I am feeling a little nervous and edgy about my trip that is now only 9 days away, what if I don't get an answer that I am hoping I get.
Yes, other people's lives are not free raw material for someone else's blog or video. Those people's lives bel9ng *to them* not to whomever is passing by. (Why my blog almost never discusses other people.)I have been puzzling over how to make this point, but when someone does share their story, that does not make it yours to pass on and share with others. I had this happen to me on my very first camino, when someone to whom I had revealed some sensitive matters took the liberty of talking about me to others. In doing so, they revealed these matters to someone who I don't think I would have shared with at the outset, and was even less less likely to have shared with as we got to know them better.
I know that there has already been some suggestion that people will include such stories in their writings. Let me assume that, if that is their intention, they have already made that clear to their interlocutors beforehand. Much the same as they might seek a release for any photographs they take of people they might want to use.
In short, if you haven't made it clear when you ask others about themselves that you might share their story, respect their privacy about the matters they share with you.
Trust. Walk. You are watched over on the Way. Buen Camino, fellow peregrine.It is quite funny I should find this thread only now as it is quite relevant to what I am now going through and a question I am asking myself.
This past decade has been a tough one with plenty of adversity, the worst being the loss of my Mum after having MS for so long and a massive falling out with my Dad and loss of contact and having a relationship end, plenty of other stuff as well.
But I have handled it all and got through it only to find that I hit a wall in my life finally around last Christmas and within a very short period of time three mentions of the Camino came up from different sources and straight away I thought 35 days hiking across Northern Spain felt like something I just needed to do and hopefully find something inside me that I just cannot put my finger on as to what that "something" is.
I have put work on hold because right now I really do not care about finances or money at this time, without sounding too daft it is my soul I feel needs some attention and hopefully a few answers that will get me through the coming years if I am so lucky.
But tonight and for the first time I am feeling a little nervous and edgy about my trip that is now only 9 days away, what if I don't get an answer that I am hoping I get.
If you don't get the answer you are looking for on the Camino (and there are certainly no guarantees), you'll just keep putting one foot in front of the other until you get there. That's something you'll have plenty of experience with and you'd be surprised how many places outside of a Camino it is applicable.But tonight and for the first time I am feeling a little nervous and edgy about my trip that is now only 9 days away, what if I don't get an answer that I am hoping I get.
Keep in mind the answer may come in hindsight. After the Camino. Just be open and aware....buen Camino!!It is quite funny I should find this thread only now as it is quite relevant to what I am now going through and a question I am asking myself.
This past decade has been a tough one with plenty of adversity, the worst being the loss of my Mum after having MS for so long and a massive falling out with my Dad and loss of contact and having a relationship end, plenty of other stuff as well.
But I have handled it all and got through it only to find that I hit a wall in my life finally around last Christmas and within a very short period of time three mentions of the Camino came up from different sources and straight away I thought 35 days hiking across Northern Spain felt like something I just needed to do and hopefully find something inside me that I just cannot put my finger on as to what that "something" is.
I have put work on hold because right now I really do not care about finances or money at this time, without sounding too daft it is my soul I feel needs some attention and hopefully a few answers that will get me through the coming years if I am so lucky.
But tonight and for the first time I am feeling a little nervous and edgy about my trip that is now only 9 days away, what if I don't get an answer that I am hoping I get.
"How did you find out about the Camino" is my standard question, too. I use it on the Camino and off the Camino when gathering with fellow caminantes. Another question I like to ask is "If I could drop you anywhere on any Camino, where would you want me to drop you?"I don’t ask often but there are times you just connect with another pilgrim, usually over a glass of wine..or three. I phrase it a bit differently, “how did you find out about the Camino” and the stories roll out. I’ve only had one person react negatively and it was a person that felt a little sketchy, carrying empty brand new gear. He was pretty aggressive and we walked on quickly, getting that bad vibe one occasionally gets when chatting on a trail. Other than that, I’ve been honored to hear many lovely stories.
That is a question I don't necessarily look forward to as "yes", "I am still married, but no, she is not alive" just seems to be an odd answer. So will see what response blurts out when someone I don't know asks me that.After my husband died - Are you married was a very difficult question to answer. And it always took me by surprise. Sometimes I would say something like - not any more - to avoid talking about it.
I think many ordinary questions can be difficult, so perhaps it's best not to be too inquisitive.
A simple "my wife passed away xx months/years ago" is enough.That is a question I don't necessarily look forward to as "yes", "I am still married, but no, she is not alive" just seems to be an odd answer. So will see what response blurts out when someone I don't know asks me that.
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