get lost to be found
Hi there,
I'm actually doing a thesis on the concept of pilgrimage and travel as a religious experience. There's a value in removing yourself from your day to day life and putting yourself in unfamiliar situations. Without the "baggage" of assumed responsibilities and identities, you are more able to focus on another aspects of yourself.
Stripped down the bare essentials necessary to continue, the camino allows a more honest form of who you are to reveal itself. You're not necessarily the car you drive, the career you do, nor the people you associate with. On the road to Santiago, you are who you chose to be at every given moment. Removed from the trappings of your "real" life, all you have is who you bring with you on your journey.
There's a truth and honesty, a self realization even, that lends itself to being a religious experience. And if the purpose of religion is to shape identity and define who we are in this universe, then pilgrimage is definitely a worthwhile medium.
Good luck!
Athena
PS - ALSO, don't underestimate the human need to belong. The Camino has a long standing history and tradition. To walk the road to Santiago is to become part of that tradition, in some form or another. Another way in which to identify oneself....