- Time of past OR future Camino
- Francés x 5, Le Puy x 2, Arles, Tours, Norte, Madrid, Via de la Plata, Portuguese, Primitivo
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Thank you @Kanga , next time I am going for a hike I can now tell my wife I am working.I can assure you, that when I am on camino, I work very hard. My exhausted body tells me that every night.
For me the Camino is also not a holiday or as I some times say , its not a walk in the park.There's outer work, and inner work
Outer work (mostly, but not always) is about getting this stuff we call money to pay for someone else to grow out food, sew our clothes, build out house, and take care of us when we get sick. And then there are all the other many things we do to take care of ourselves and each other, and to live. It's all a lot of doing, whether we're paid or not.
Inner work on the other hand, thrives in stillness, silence, and not doing. No matter what the body's doing.
The Camino for me is mostly it's time for retreat and rejuvenation, for that inner work. I don't do it for fun, or to see sights--though both of these things definitely happen. But mostly I do it to open, to understand, to see clearly, to challenge myself so that I go over the edge of what is comfortable and learn from that. To touch what is essential and real, and to learn to let go of what isn't. To purify the heart of whatever gets in the way of kindness, clarity, and natural peace. To train in patience, kindness, contentment, and gratitude--no matter what might be happening.
Some people walk the Camino primarily to eat, drink, and have a nice walk. That's a holiday.
Some people walk the Camino to have a nice walk AND do their inner work. I'd have a very hard time calling that a holiday.
And some people walk the Camino mostly to do their inner work, and having a nice walk is nice if it happens. That's definitely not a holiday.
Money has less to do with it than attitude.
I'm sorry folks,but this post has distinctly unsettled me.I did not want to hijack @Rebekah Scott's thread on the future of Camino Hospitality, so hence this one.
In that thread, @Mark Lee said, among other things:
I kinda like being able to get a hot shower, clean (actual) bed/bunk, hot meal and cold beer everyday while walking the Camino. I have no desire to suffer. Live austerely. Been there, done that and bought the t-shirt. Not looking to do it on holiday. Yup folks. Walking the Camino is a holiday. You sure as hell ain't working. If you ain't working you are either retired or on holiday.
I know that the word "holiday" originates from Holy Day, but today that we divide activity into "work" or "holidays" purely on the basis of financial reward, simply underscores our basic consumerism. It is the philosophy of the market.
The camino is (or used to be) about another and different paradigm.
I think the market philosophy is way too simplistic, in any case. Why should activity be defined as "work" only if it is paid in coin? I doubt there is a single parent in the world who would agree with that. I enjoy some activities, for which I am paid, as much as some for which I am not paid. And vice versa. For me there is little relationship between the two.
Some societies and languages do not have a word that equates to "work". They simply have words that describe an activity.
I can assure you, that when I am on camino, I work very hard. My exhausted body tells me that every night.
It all seems terribly limiting to value everything in terms of money.
Thanks for that, and it doesn't really bother me that my quote became a thread without me even knowing it. It's kinda nice that something I said on a one dimensional internet forum had enough of an effect on someone else that they made it a topic. Guess I got them to thinking. They sure nuff is defensive bout it.I'm sorry folks,but this post has distinctly unsettled me.
And the moderators can boot me off if they want to for saying so!
I honestly don't think it's right that someone else's opinion and post should be quoted like this and then discussed and dissected in such a manner.
Whilst there are some very self satisfied replies re inner and outer self cleansing whilst on the Camino,does it really matter if some of us enjoy the Camino simply as a holiday or a long walk as long as we respect the Camino and all that this entails.
Walking for us is certainly not a punishment and and why should we want to suffer?
Neither do I need the Camino to find my inner self....I can and do that on any long walk or indeed in my own garden.
But of course I fully respect those who utilise the Camino for this purpose.
I am not a pilgrim but the love that I have for the Camino still amazes me and indeed surprises me and .even now, as we prepare to set off again in June, I can taste it,smell it and dream of it ....and my excitement is as real as the many newbies that set off from SJPDP ......and yes....it will be a holiday for us in every sense of the word!!
Also remember folks that some who start off the Camino as walkers...
end it as pilgrims!! .......might even include the holidaymakers!!
I'm sorry folks,but this post has distinctly unsettled me.
And the moderators can boot me off if they want to for saying so!
I honestly don't think it's right that someone else's opinion and post should be quoted like this and then discussed and dissected in such a manner.
Whilst there are some very self satisfied replies re inner and outer self cleansing whilst on the Camino,does it really matter if some of us enjoy the Camino simply as a holiday or a long walk as long as we respect the Camino and all that this entails.....
Hello, Annette...not at all. When I wrote what I said about what constitutes a holiday versus something else, I did not say anything at all about the relative value of just walking versus something else. Others may infer that, but it wasn't either meant or said. I just edited my post to make that clear and I'm sorry if anything I said caused discomfort.Whilst there are some very self satisfied replies re inner and outer self cleansing whilst on the Camino,does it really matter if some of us enjoy the Camino simply as a holiday or a long walk as long as we respect the Camino and all that this entails.
Whilst there are some very self satisfied replies re inner and outer self cleansing whilst on the Camino,does it really matter if some of us enjoy the Camino simply as a holiday or a long walk as long as we respect the Camino and all that this entails.
Walking for us is certainly not a punishment and and why should we want to suffer?
Neither do I need the Camino to find my inner self....I can and do that on any long walk or indeed in my own garden.
But of course I fully respect those who utilise the Camino for this purpose.
I am not a pilgrim but the love that I have for the Camino still amazes me and indeed surprises me and .even now, as we prepare to set off again in June, I can taste it,smell it and dream of it ....and my excitement is as real as the many newbies that set off from SJPDP ......and yes....it will be a holiday for us in every sense of the word!!
I think of Camino time not as "time off", like holidays, but "time apart" - for me, walking the camino is a different life than the one I usually lead - work, obligations, hobbies, volunteer stuff - there is always something I SHOULD be doing.
On the Camino, whether it's for a weekend or for weeks and weeks, time is different, life is different. The only important things are putting one foot in front of the other, and what's for lunch?
Mental hygiene, that's what the Camino is - for me.
When I head to the camino, which I do every year, I leave nearly all of my "real world" commitments behind; I put on my clean clothes and wash my dirty clothes with no thought for fashion or appearance; I follow no one's wishes but my own; I pick and choose my company, leaving behind the bloviators and trying to make contact with kindred spirits; I take a detour to walk through a beautiful gorge or to see a hidden romanesque or visigothic church; I occasionally splurge and stay in a special (and maybe pricey) place. It is self-indulgent and privileged, and there is absolutely no other way I would rather spend my time, so what is that if not a holiday?
Thanks for that, and it doesn't really bother me that my quote became a thread without me even knowing it.
Yeah, I probably disabled those alerts some time ago. I never check those account settings.I quoted your thread @Mark Lee because, unless you have disabled it, you automatically receive an alert so would know.
It's kinda nice that something I said on a one dimensional internet forum had enough of an effect on someone else that they made it a topic. Guess I got them to thinking. They sure nuff is defensive bout it.
That being said, I think they protest too much.
Please Don't, Kanga! It's much more interesting than boots--and goes to the core of what it is that we're all doing out there. So far, we are (mostly) cordial, and I for one am getting a lot out of everything people are saying.Maybe I should close this thread. It seems very far away from "helping pilgrims since 2004". Or boots.
I think it all boils down to motivation and attitude, rather than venue and remuneration. And as I use the term, inner work can involve thinking and reflection--but not aimless woolgathering or wandering mind. It aims always towards understanding and letting go. (I know, all very Buddhist--but I imagine that's pretty universal in other traditions, please correct me I'm wrong, everyone.)If I earn money, but I am not employed, and I continue to earn money while I am on Camino (I wish) - is the Camino then work or a holiday? Does work have to involve effort? If yes, does it have to be physical effort? If mental effort - what distinguishes it from plain "thinking"?
Yes. Yes! And even more so.Should we think of work in terms of social utility, not market forces? If so, is "internal work" as @Viranani uses the term, of value? What if it makes me a better person, and therefore a greater contributor to community wellbeing?
Walking the Camino is self-indulgent, and those of us with the time and means to do it are privileged. And I think that we all do it for our own selfish reasons.
A pilgrimage has different goals than a holiday.
Saying the Camino is nothing more than a holiday (a holiday being something that can be bought and booked by everyone with enough money) somehow robs it of its essence - being a pilgrimage.
I think you are right . A holiday for me is any longer lasting activitity which you undertake totally based on your own choice, no pressure from society or others. Wheather you spend it on strenuous activities, (inner or outer) pilgrimage and so on is of no importance in this. Walking treks in Nepal or Camino was hard on the body, still I never would qualify it as work.Thanks for that, and it doesn't really bother me that my quote became a thread without me even knowing it. It's kinda nice that something I said on a one dimensional internet forum had enough of an effect on someone else that they made it a topic. Guess I got them to thinking. They sure nuff is defensive bout it.
That being said, I think they protest too much.
Also, I certainly never meant to imply that if one is retired one does not work. I do realize a lot of retirees work their asses off doing volunteer and charity stuff. I have friends who do just that, and it really has nothing to do with he topic and I do realize that people take time off from work to volunteer, do charity, etc. The Camino can be physically strenuous, and that is in a way a form of working your body, but it's not a job.
and I'm not talking about hospitaleros...they work, and I have no idea how that got ingrained in the topic.
Again, if you take off from your job and go and walk the Camino, or the AT, or the PCT, or do say, do a marathon, you are engaging in a physically strenuous hobby/pastime during your vacation/holiday.
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