- Time of past OR future Camino
- CdS 2012, CdN 2013, Shikoku 2015, CP 2016.
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Good article and thank you for sharing.
Slightly more women than men last year - 53%. The gradual increase in the proportion of women walking has been quite noticeable over the years.whilst females are of equal number on the Camino
From a male standpoint, a reminder and more, that whilst females are of equal number on the Camino, the pre activity questions - how will your husband cope, what does your husband think of you going without him, still abound, seemingly asked in many cases by women as well as men. You got to work pretty hard to ask questions that offend both women and men as these ones do!!!
When I quit my last job as an employee to take a break and do some "crazy" things, my that time boss said he wished he would be brave enough to do the same. ;-)'Or perhaps — best of all — I would have drowned out his disappointment with an enthusiasm so boundless he would have packed his own backpack and set off to the road himself.'
That is a brilliant camino inspired response.
I agree, some of the questions asked are asked of any hiker. My mother questioned why I was doing long distance hiking--to her, hiking or walking was something you did to get somewhere, not necessarily for fun. And historically, hiking or walking has not always been a choice made for pleasure, but because you didn't have the means to get someplace any other way.One could add that the first half of the text is in fact not so unsimilar to what male future pilgrims often experience. This probably does not stem from being male or female, but from the inability of people to understand why one wants to do it. Why walk a camino. They do not know what it is like when the road is calling you. They are helpless, desperate to understand why anyone would go ... and so they start to make up reasons that would seem plausible to them.
For women they might anticipate problems with their relationships or them trying to find a man. For men it is often attributed to a sort of "midlife crisis", problems at the job or not being able to cope with pressure, "burnout". Very common assumptions and I have seen the victims being really disappointed and hurt because of that.
This is very true!I think when I do things by choice, I tend not to mind the stereo type.
As a 75-year-old female engineer who loves to travel alone, this article is a yawn for me. Been there; done that; I refuse to wear the t-shirt.
This is very true!
it does feel that change is finally happening.
Respect. I bet when you first decided that's wanted you wanted to become you had to fight for it though. It's precisely because of people like you that other women no longer have to.As a 75-year-old female engineer who loves to travel alone, this article is a yawn for me. Been there; done that; I refuse to wear the t-shirt.
You could well be right about all of the above. But could it be that the 'Intrepid' comments for example weren't aimed at age or gender, rather purely at the fact that you were heading off overseas to walk 800 kilometers? I think nothing of people going traveling, but walking 800 km - now that's something!When I worked in Auckland, ran large marketing departments, and photo studios, and people heard I was heading off for another Camino, I would get comments of 'WOW', and 'you're really intrepid'. Maybe because I was a middle aged woman, and in their eyes didn't look capable of even imaging such a thing. Mostly I didn't tell people. Not particularly sexist, but ageist I think.
I now live in a rural area, where I'm part of a family known for their running and walking, and I get "didn't you already do that". So they assume its a bucket list thing, they're very capable and outdoorsy people around here, they wouldn't imagine other motives. I dont explain.
I would get comments of 'WOW', and 'you're really intrepid'. Maybe because I was a middle aged woman, and in their eyes didn't look capable of even imaging such a thing.
Yes, I got the same questions. And when I said that I was going alone people (mostly other women) tell me that I'm so brave to travel alone. It's not bravery at all. It's my preference. I don't want to have any obligations to another person while I'm on the Camino. I want to walk as far as I want to walk, start in the morning when I want to start, and eat where I want to eat without having to discuss it with someone else.Pretty much everyone’s first question when I told them I was walking the Camino in the fall was a version of, “are you doing it with someone?” This was almost immediately followed by a pause where they were clearly trying to decide how to ask if walking 500 miles as a solo female traveler was safe. I didn’t hold that against them, though.
As a 75-year-old female engineer who loves to travel alone, this article is a yawn for me. Been there; done that; I refuse to wear the t-shirt.
Same. I quit science for other reasons but would have been one of the ones saying that, @Sssnek. And where I have lived much of the last 20 years (in a different place and culture altogether) I've dealt with huge levels of gender inequality - but fortunately none of the sexual aggression. I'm not passive, but But have no interest at all in hanging onto whatever reactions come up about all that. It only multiplies the difficulty.I quit my job as a scientist right before the Camino because I got tired of the casual sexism there. But, as my older female coworkers would often tell me, it’s much better than it used to be because at least men aren’t groping us in the lab anymore
We can go around being mad, hurt, or upset about it all the time or we can chose not to let others hold that kind of power over us.
Ok, I thought it was just me thinking younger people are more sensitive.Same. I quit science for other reasons but would have been one of the ones saying that, @Sssnek. And where I have lived much of the last 20 years (in a different place and culture altogether) I've dealt with huge levels of gender inequality - but fortunately none of the sexual aggression. I'm not passive, but But have no interest at all in hanging onto whatever reactions come up about all that. It only multiplies the difficulty.
I see this attitude every day where I am and really resonate with the power of it:
It's in part generational, I think. The article just reminds me how much culture has changed. People are much more sensitive now than 20 or 30 years ago. Some would say too sensitive, but that's another topic altogether. And we are more independent than our mothers and grandmothers. I can't count the number of times that a Spanish abuela has asked with amazement if I'm not afraid to walk alone.
Yep! I get that. I got tired of being angry about it, so I left. If it hadn’t been affecting my coworkers so much too, it probably wouldn’t have bothered me as muchI'm not passive, but But have no interest at all in hanging onto whatever reactions come up about all that. It only multiplies the difficulty.
I burst into tears like four times on the Camino, but usually because of something really beautiful or moving! A pilgrim started singing Ave Maria in a tiny church on a hill outside of Pamplona and the pure EMOTION had me and several other people in tears. It’s an emotional trip!I'm still recovering from the shock of 8 young women bursting into tears at intervals on our recent Camino
The one that DID bug me was how many people speculated if I’d meet a guy in Spain. I was 23 and yes, finding a partner WAS on my radar, but it still bothered me for a few reasons. First of all: I’m bisexual, it totally could have been a woman. Second: It would be much easier to “find a man” if I just went to a bar at home instead of walking every day for over a month! I was sweaty and gross like 90% of the time! To me, that’s what crossed from casual inquiry to kinda sexist remark: if you need to stretch the reality that much to match my actions to a sexist stereotype, maybe don’t say it
People comment just as much now about me travelling alone as they did when I was a young woman. Most people still like to travel with a companion.When my mother traveled the world 65 years ago she had, for the most part, a female companion.
You flatter me. The only thing I had to fight for was to pass the darn courses, same as my classmates did. I made a choice for practical reasons, and my career aspirations were distinctly modest, so I was not frustrated!Respect. I bet when you first decided that's wanted you wanted to become you had to fight for it though. It's precisely because of people like you that other women no longer have to
Pretty much everyone’s first question when I told them I was walking the Camino in the fall was a version of, “are you doing it with someone?” This was almost immediately followed by a pause where they were clearly trying to decide how to ask if walking 500 miles as a solo female traveler was safe. I didn’t hold that against them, though.
For centuries, Philosophy and Spiritual journeys have largely been the activities of men. Money and Time are a luxury that most women do not access. I think about my mother who grew up having to care for a husband, children and parents. She had little time to spend on herself and certainly not 41 days to walk the Camino. After this opportunity I am more indebted to her sacrifices that allowed me to make choices in my life that led me here.After I got home from my first camino, my brother's father-in-law quipped "did you go to find a husband?". He seemed to be very impressed with himself in asking that question, but to me it felt so demeaning and infantilizing. I just walked 500 miles across Spain. And you think the ONLY reason in taking something like that on is that I want to be a wife?
I could say more about this article. It nails so many micro-aggressions we deal with that end up feeling like a million paper cuts. It's pervasive.
Seriously?For centuries, Philosophy and Spiritual journeys have largely been the activities of men. Money and Time are a luxury that most women do not access
What century are we talking about here, Alex?Money and Time are a luxury that most women do not access.
She had little time to spend on herself and certainly not 41 days to walk the Camino. After this opportunity I am more indebted to her sacrifices that allowed me to make choices in my life that led me here.
This is very similar to my own mother's story, and that of all of her four sisters in their adult lives. Far more opportunities are available to women now than in prior generations, although true equality with men is still lacking in many instances, and most noticeably in other parts of the world.I think about my mother who grew up having to care for a husband, children and parents. She had little time to spend on herself and certainly not 41 days to walk the Camino.
This is very similar to my own mother's story, and that of all of her four sisters in their adult lives. Far more opportunities are available to women now than in prior generations, although true equality with men is still lacking in many instances, and most noticeably in other parts of the world.
My grandmother learned to drive when she was 63 years old, after her husband died.When I was 14, my parents divorced and I vividly recall going with my mother to buy a car. She had never done anything like that before -- she had gone from living with her parents to living with my father, who made all major decisions and control all expenses. Although a brilliant and very capable woman, she was terrified of making a mistake -- buying the wrong car, paying too much, getting tricked in some way. And, most of all, not being able to buy the car at all -- it was 1975, and it was only a year earlier that the law had changed to allow women to have credit in their own name.
Yes, yes, yes. I am so grateful for the same. I take my mother with me on all my journeys. She died young and my life is all about taking advantage of the opportunities she didn’t have not just because she was unwell but because of societal expectations of her role and laws. It usually took a financially independent and/or very brave woman to step outside those expectations if it was possible. I’ve seen many things on my journeys and it appears to me that a majority of women in this world continue to struggle with poverty and gender-based expectations of their ‘place’ and role.When I was 14, my parents divorced and I vividly recall going with my mother to buy a car. She had never done anything like that before -- she had gone from living with her parents to living with my father, who made all major decisions and controlled all expenses. Although a brilliant and very capable woman, she was terrified of making a mistake -- buying the wrong car, paying too much, getting tricked in some way. And, most of all, not being able to buy the car at all -- it was 1975, and it was only a year earlier that the law had changed to allow women to have credit in their own name.
This one experience had a profound effect on me. Right then and there, I knew that I'd capitalize on and be thankful for what my mother and other women of that era were learning how to do -- becoming independent people capable of taking care of themselves and making their own decisions. If I may have gone overboard (see above post), I'm OK with that. I have had an incredibly fulfilling life doing things that my mother was never able to do.
If we stop thinking only of the wealthiest women in the wealthiest nations (who are not at all representative of the global population), I would place the observation in the immediate tense. Do the poorest women of the world want to go on pilgrimages? Long explorations? We don’t know; they haven’t even been allowed to get out of primary school before they’ve been are are being put into the “service“ of the economic needs of the adults around them, and married off as soon as possible.What century are we talking about here, Alex?
Yes, yes, yes. I am so grateful for the same. I take my mother with me on all my journeys.
Is a “science” magazine that distinguishes “men’s interest” from “women’s interest” even worth looking at?But my eldest daughter is sick of it. She is a science teacher which seems to surprise a few people. Physics and Chemistry too, not Biology which shocks a few. Biology is about bodies so that could be for girls right! When she looks a bit a science magazine she often has to look in the ‘mens interest’ section!
I don’t think the magazine (circulation 8k per month) decides where the product is displayed in business with a turnover > £5 billion per annum!Is a “science” magazine that distinguishes “men’s interest” from “women’s interest” even worth looking at?
Science magazines of that kind (e.g. not peer reviewed journals where you submit your articles as a scientist) are not science but only meant for entertainment.Is a “science” magazine that distinguishes “men’s interest” from “women’s interest” even worth looking at?
Sorry I don’t understand. I am talking about a top level science magazine- peer reviewed by top scientists. But no way would they ever have the clout to dictate their shelf positioning in a big turnover street newsagent!Science magazines of that kind (e.g. not peer reviewed journals where you submit your articles as a scientist) are not science but only meant for entertainment.
And they have gender specific sections?? I know that Nature and Science already a decade ago started becoming a bit ... ordinary. But that is something hard to imagine. Or something I do not want to imagine.Sorry I don’t understand. I am talking about a top level science magazine- peer reviewed by top scientists. But no way would they ever have the clout to dictate their shelf positioning in a big turnover street newsagent!
It’s the way the shop sets up! Not at the behest of the Magazine. Yea it sounds mad but it happens!And they have gender specific sections?? I know that Nature and Science already a decade ago started becoming a bit ... ordinary. But that is something hard to imagine. Or something I do not want to imagine.
It’s the way the shop sets up! Not at the behest of the Magazine. Yea it sounds mad but it happens!
My daughter seems happy and she doesn’t stand any nonsense. But yes the gossip mags ( mthe big sellers) get the prime positions! Where are you in the Artic btw?
Still those are not the workhorse publications, but those who go for sensationalism. But sad nevertheless. Maybe it is good that I left science a good while ago.
Northern Sweden would that be.My daughter seems happy and she doesn’t stand any nonsense. But yes the gossip mags ( mthe big sellers) get the prime positions! Where are you in the Artic btw?
i have friends near Abisko. Just 3 hrs drive from here.Cool. Was in Abisko and Narvik last European summer and hoping to get futher north this summer!
I don't think TravellingMan22 is saying that the science magazine has "men's interest" and "women's interest" sections but rather that the shops where it is sold have such sections, and that the science magazines his daughter is interested in are sold in a section of the shop that indicates they aren't considered of interest to women. Frankly, I'm less surprised by the placement of such magazines within the shop than that they can be found there at all. My experience with the high prestige, peer reviewed journals is that they are rarely found in newsstands and usually only accessible through a university library. But I wasn't studying science. I guess peer reviewed medieval studies journals are a bit more niche.And they have gender specific sections?? I know that Nature and Science already a decade ago started becoming a bit ... ordinary. But that is something hard to imagine. Or something I do not want to imagine.
Thanks for clarification. I was so shocked by the possibility of a discrimination by gender that i did not read fully ... .. also I am in the middle of a snow storm so I am distracted.I don't think TravellingMan22 is saying that the science magazine has "men's interest" and "women's interest" sections but rather that the shops where it is sold have such sections, and that the science magazines his daughter is interested in are sold in a section of the shop that indicates they aren't considered of interest to women. Frankly, I'm less surprised by the placement of such magazines within the shop than that they can be found there at all. My experience with the high prestige, peer reviewed journals is that they are rarely found in newsstands and usually only accessible through a university library. But I wasn't studying science. I guess peer reviewed medieval studies journals are a bit more niche.
I think there is a typo error in your post, or something incomplete, which is causing some of the confusion. What do you mean when you wrote "When she looks a bit a science magazine"?When she looks a bit a science magazine she often has to look in the ‘mens interest’ section!
Ooh sorry! Totally my fault!! I totally missed the point and the typo made it worse. David thanks for the mopping up whilst I slept.Thanks for clarification. I was so shocked by the possibility of a discrimination by gender that i did not read fully ... .. also I am in the middle of a snow storm so I am distracted.
the small and subtle stuff like the one my daughter mentioned. Stuff like messaging on clothes - ‘be kind’ on the girls t shirts, and action images on the boy and so on! It was interesting and I learnt a fair bit! Remember once a major high street brand brought out an aviation range depicting boys as pilots and girls as cabin crew which caused a bit not a fuss. No longer on X as sadly when the person points the stuff out the replies are not very heartening!
I must live in a different world (which could actually be the case with respect to geography and culture), as I never saw these things attributed to men only, not in magazines/catalogues. It is more like heaps of equipment presented gender neutral, except when it comes to real anatomical differences ... and colours in clothing. Here in Sweden, all advertising for outdoor activities and all you need for it always strongly addresses men and women alike.What I notice all the time is that equipment reviews* in general circulation magazines always, without fail, have (a) the men's equipment reviewed first and (b) more pages/space devoted to men's equipment.
*e.g. skis, backpacks, running shoes, etc.
I must live in a different world (which could actually be the case with respect to geography and culture), as I never saw these things attributed to men only, not in magazines/catalogues. It is more like heaps of equipment presented gender neutral, except when it comes to real anatomical differences ... and colours in clothing. Here in Sweden, all advertising for outdoor activities and all you need for it always strongly addresses men and women alike.
The only annoyance is colours in clothing. Females that prefer natural colours that do not hurt the eye mostly have to stick to the hunting clothes section as "normal outdoor" is flooded with strange colour schemes supposedly more fitting for women. Is that sexism? Maybe. Is that only the industry serving female taste in colours? Maybe. I really do not know. In any case I think most outdoor clothing for women hurts my eyes and I know many women that think like me.
You understand now why I love the Woolpower brand! Unisex sizes and not much to choose in terms of colours!
I, for one, will be eternally grateful that I married a strong woman. I, have grown as a person throughout the years and as an equally strong couple we have managed to raise two wonderful, strong daughters, who are as early twenty year-old's, forging their own path.What century are we talking about here, Alex?
Men are grateful for women's sacrifices so they can lead their own lives. Women are grateful for other women who break barriers so they can live beyond societal expectations.