MinaKamina
Eclipsigrina ~ August 12, 2026
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Jacobspad 2017
Am I the only one a little uncomfortable with this idea? It is one thing to accept hospitality when offered or help when needed, but to boldly knock on someone´s door and ask for a place to stay when you don´t need it goes against the grain for me. It could be construed as taking advantage of someone´s generosity and could easily be abused, especially when there is a clear wealth difference between the giver and the recipient in favour of the latter. If a total stranger knocked on your door one night, would you invite them in to stay the night?
Happened to me some years ago.
Late in the evening when I was about to leave with my dogs for a last walk, a stranger with an old bike showed up at my front door. He had lost his way, he was looking for a camp site. There is a holiday park with a camping area nearby, but they would be closed at this time of the night. I said he could put up his tent in the field next to the garden. He looks at me and says: I don't have a tent.
In the end, I offered him a bed. Not in the house, but in an old campervan. The next day, he refused to leave. 'I am going to stay a while,' he said. He did a lot of maintenance work in the campervan.
The experience was surreal. When he finally left - with a little help of a friend of mine - I realized that his strategy had been a mixture of ambush and grooming. Manipulation.
I no longer open the door for strangers.