- Time of past OR future Camino
- Inglès April 2023
Primitivo July 2023
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In addition, I advise people not to reserve every night before they start the Camino, since they are very unlikely to know exactly how far that can/want to walk each day. And of course no one can know if illness or injury will slow them down, or when they might just want to take a rest day.This is why I always advise people, especially for a first Camino, to budget significantly more time than they think they might need. You never know until you are walking what the right daily distance will be for you.
Isn't this the best bit of down to earth camino truth? We can catastrophize all we like, but no awful state stays the same for long.I woke up a total grump this morning, cried before the sun even came up, and then walked for five hours with a couple who absolutely turned my day around
Very wise to deal with this when it's potentially rather than full-on infected!potentially infected blister
Yes. Absolutely. Patience and perseverance are our best friends. One step at a time.The Camino is HARD! But it is already the most moving thing I’ve ever done.
So wonderful. The reason? You may only know that long after the fact. For now, all you can do is be a sponge, soaking up everything the Camino offers, fun and not so fun.I’m still not sure why I’m doing this. My reasons originally don’t seem to fit, and new reasons have popped up. For now I’m just feeling happy to be here
Four years of studying bacteria in university have me 100% agreeing with you. Unfortunately, it is no longer a hypothetical, that blister is definitely infected. I’ve got some amoxicillin in my left pocket, and the feeling that I might as well lance the blister on the bottom of my foot if I’m going to be wiping out my gut microbiome anyways. Lots of probiotics and yogurt on the Camino in my future!Very wise to deal with this when it's potentially rather than full-on infected!
Oh, dang. Sorry to hear that.Unfortunately, it is no longer a hypothetical, that blister is definitely infected
Other trips may move us further or faster, but the Camino moves us more. ;-)The Camino is HARD! But it is already the most moving thing I’ve ever done.
I see this piece of advice all the time and in general it’s a good one! For me though, it doesn’t work as well. I think I might be the only peregrino who sleeps just fine in the dormitory rooms! I’m a pretty deep sleeper so the snoring doesn’t bug me, and I haven’t found many of the beds to be that uncomfortable either.If you are staying in abergues, splurge for nicer accommodations. I have found the good night of sleep has done wonders for me
since Hitchhiker’s Guide I have almost exclusively been listening to/reading romance lolYes, you will!
How's the Camino book list going?
Hey I'm certainly not suggesting REAL camino books - I'm all for stuff that lightens the mental load such as hitchhiker's guide or indeed your witches books!A peregrina I met really wants me to read Project Hail Mary, so I downloaded it, but I haven’t really been in the mood for super serious (hence Douglas Adams)
Hey, if it is important for you, go for it ! Personally I don't think it's worth stressing about. I'd rather plan for longer and finish quicker than the other way around but that's just me. I'm forever planning for the worst and hoping for the best it's simply how I live. Gotta say it generally works!OH!!! I do think I might finish my Camino in 42 days, or close enough that I might wiggle some things around to make it happen
I read Good Omens and enjoyed it, but was never super interested in reading discworld. But to answer your question: most popular books have an audiobook version! And even some less popular ones. It’s become super common in the last several yearsis there any Terry Pratchett perhaps?
Oh definitely! Mostly it’s that I’m shooting for 20-25 km days with at least one more rest day before the end. That plan would just so happen to land me somewhere around 40-43 days total, so we’ll see how things go!I'd rather plan for longer and finish quicker than the other way around but that's just me. I'm forever planning for the worst and hoping for the best it's simply how I live. Gotta say it generally works!
Yeah I get he's not for everybody, I just personally love the wacky sense of humour and the offbeat parallels with the universe in which we live.I read Good Omens and enjoyed it, but was never super interested in reading discworld. But to answer your question: most popular books have an audiobook version! And even some less popular ones. It’s become super common in the last several years
Some of my friends have talked a lot about this book!! Maybe that can be next!Alternatively 'Gideon the Ninth'. By Tasmyn Muir
She has several posts today, starting with this one:I see that your last post Sssnek was on 10 October. How are you now?
Alas we must take the good with the bad: Took a rest day in Leòn because my left ankle (anterior, not Achilles) started hurting a ton, but while the rest day was good for my body, it was hard on my mind.
So now I’m returning to everyone’s good advice from three weeks ago. I can do it! I am strong and powerful and have already done something super impressive! The voice in my head is lying to me! I have come so far! I will finish!
If you are looking for some good witchy books let me highly recommend any of Terry Pratchett's Witch or Tiffany Aching books. You can start with Equal Rites or Wyrd Sisters for the former and with Wee Free Men for the latter.I will say though I’ve been craving some good witchy books
You are very far from alone in feeling like this. For any number of reasons there doesn't seem to be a month go by that somebody doesn't post along similar lines here on the forum. And those are the handful that, like you, reach out for help to your fellow forum members. Which to me means that consciously or unconsciously, you don't want to quit.
And you know what?
ALL of the pilgrims that I've followed with these issues in the last few months have completed their Camino.
Every. Single. One.
YOU can too
I have arrived!!! Day 39, and I walked into Santiago de Compostela today with some powerful winds and impressive sheets of rain! I cried walking down the hill into the city, and again walking out of the tunnel and seeing the cathedral.
Thank you to everyone who helped lift me up a month ago. This has been the coolest, scariest, and hardest thing I have ever done, and I am so immensely proud of myself for making it.
I also want to share this from those early days, because Peterexpatkiwi has said many lovely and encouraging things, but this is the one that stuck with me:
I repeated it to probably half a dozen peregrinos on the Way, saying something along the lines of “You’re reaching out, practically begging for a reason to keep going. That’s how I know you’ll make it.”
And we all did, in the end. Buen Camino everyone! I can’t believe I’m saying this, because I still don’t really like walking, but I hope I’ll see some of you on my next Camino.
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(I listened to 55 hours and 5 minutes worth of audiobooks along the way)
Update time! It is the morning of Day 32 and I am leaving Cacabelos. Probably 9-11 more days until Santiago!
See post #131 above!Lets hope that OP has indeed finished her Camino by now
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