Good morning pilgrims! May this day be blessed - May your day be filled with joy - Leaving town we passed a monument to a pilgrim who died while biking the Camino - used his bike - said a prayer and started the morning
Thursday, March 14, 2024
The Way - Day 30
Wednesday, March 13, 2024
The Way - Day 29
Another beautiful sunny morning - except for our very last day in Spain - no rain - mornings always cool --needed to wear our lightweight "puffy" jacket for the first hour - then put in our pack and walked in our short sleeves and shorts until quitting time - as we journey this Lent - always important that we are comfortable as we sit and read our bibles - say prayers - sit in adoration. Removing distractions goes well for any spiritual exercise that we engage in.
Regardless of what the actual truth is - Cruz de Ferro is beautiful to behold and climbing to the top of the hill will allow you to take in your surroundings from a different perspective. One of the best things about the Iron Cross is that it allows you to partake in a very old - freeing tradition. When you approach it - you’ll see that it’s surrounded by small rocks of all shapes and sizes - rocks carried from home by thousands of pilgrims - representing their own burdens - left at the foot of the Cross.
Tuesday, March 12, 2024
The Way - Day 28
When we were making our plans in 2013 to walk the Camino - I had a discussion with one of my sisters in regards to a critique that Americans tend to walk in very long strides whereas Europeans tend to walk in shorter strides. She had just returned from an European vacation on which many of the Americans had difficulty walking up hills. The tour host had tried to teach them that taking small short steps would enable them to walk farther with less effort. Armed with that information - she thought we could use that knowledge on the Camino. The reality is that when walking the Camino - one will naturally employ the complete range available to any walker. One fact that we learned in training for the Camino and in designing our "Camino de los Santos" is that the average person's stride is approximately 30 inches which translates to 2000 steps in a mile. Using that number - it is easy to calculate that the entire Camino of 500 miles translates into one million steps! Some people are big on tracking steps - miles - kilometers - whatever distance they cover when walking - cycling - swimming. Many in Lent track their number of rosaries - chaplets - hours in adoration - Mases attended - as markers along their Lenten journey. Whatever metric you do - do not use - is perfectly fine - helping you to track your success - progress during these 40 days. Anything you can do to encourage - inspire you to stay the journey is just fine. Leaving San Javier - a good night's sleep - we once again headed out into the unknown. In Lent - baby steps - just fine as long as you continue to advance on your journey.
Monday, March 11, 2024
The Way - Day 27
Our albergue from the previous night was interesting in that instead of regular bunk beds - they had triple layer bunks. They were too high for us older pilgrims to attempt - stayed in the lower level bunks. They were setup with two sets of three layer bunks in an alcove. Although English - in one form or another - is the universal language - on the Camino there is a large number of people who are only able to communicate through a language not native to them. On numerous occasions I had to use my limited Spanish - on a few occasions spoke with a peregrino whose native tongue was neither English or Spanish - yet we were able to understand each other and communicate - both with limited Spanish - a testament to people seeking to communicate with others. In Lent frequently we may be invited to share a spiritual experience that is foreign to us - joining others who are comfortable in that devotion - opens us to new prayer experiences.