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A Sacred Journey

practicing pilgrimage at home and abroad

Intentional Travel Archives

Whether you’re going on pilgrimage or simply vacation, approaching a journey with intention can transform you from a tourist into a traveler. Find posts on intentional travel below, discover my favorite travel tips on the resources page, and sign up here to receive updates on new posts directly in your inbox.

Travel Tip: What to Pack for a Retreat

What to Pack for a Retreat » asacredjourney.net

As you know, right now I’m in Tucson, Arizona participating in the Hesychia School of Spiritual Direction. While it’s certainly a training program, it’s got the retreat vibe written all over it, and I’ve been so ready for such a time as this.

It seems to me that however hard we try to live with intention in our daily lives, chaos is always finds a way to creep (or crash) in. It’s just a fact of life, and accepting it is a practice in itself. Sometimes practicing intention in our daily lives means stepping away from them for a few days in the form of retreat—a time away simply devoted to going deeper with God and our true selves.

For today’s travel tip, I’ve rounded up some suggestions on what to pack for a retreat to help foster an intentional time away:

1. items to create a sacred space

Bring a favorite scented candle or something else to make the space you’ll be occupying for the next few days your own and remind you of the Sacred. (While we’re on the subject, don’t tell them I have this candle.) You could also bring an icon or a print of an inspiring image. Find a special place for the items once you arrive and treat it like a make-shift altar—an expression of your desires for your time away and a space that you add things to as your journey continues (stones or feathers gathered on a walk, perhaps?).

2. inspiration

For some, this might mean music. Others might be inspired by images, as mentioned above. Me? I’m forever inspired by words. If you’ve got room, bring along some of your favorite books of poetry and prayers, ready for the moments when you need some extra guidance. If you don’t have room for extra books, consider taking some of your favorite passages and making your own personal liturgy.

3. something to write with

Pens are both necessary and easy to forget, which is why I’m including them here even though they’re more on the practical side. I always bring plenty with me and often bring different colors just in case I want to add a little depth to my exploration. If you want to get wild, bring a pack of colored pencils! (Perhaps I’m asking too much of you—I get carried away sometimes….)

4. a journal

Unless you’re doing a silent retreat sans words of all sorts, I consider a journal a must (if you are giving up words during your time, you might like to read about my own experience). Choose one especially for the occasion, serving as symbolism for the intention you’re putting into your time away. (Plus, you totally deserve it!)

5. things to create with

A retreat is the perfect time to tap into your creativity. Bringing creative tools with you on your retreat gives you the opportunity to journey beyond words. Perhaps the clicking of knitting needles comforts you with its Sacred rhythm or the blank canvas invites you to explore the depths or your soul and fill the page with what you discover. Choose something that you love, but consider trying something new, too. If you feel a bit timid on the creative front, cut out images from magazines that capture your attention (both in positive and negative ways) and make a collage. Here’s a tip: check your left brain at the door.

6. something comforting

This could be a blanket, your coziest pair of slippers, or your go-to mug and your favorite hot tea. If you’re going on retreat to draw closer to God and your true self, then why not start with the things that bring your true self delight? In the end, I’m learning that the ultimate fruit of time away on retreat is learning to simply be—with ourselves and with God—and learning to love ourselves as God created us is truly something to be celebrated.

GO FURTHER…

What would you add to this list?

bluebikeblogtour

I’m linking up today with other bloggers around the blogosphere about living more slowly and with intention in celebration of Tsh Oxenreider’s new book, Notes from a Blue Bike: The Art of Living Intentionally in a Chaotic World, out today. Read the rest of the posts in the linkup here.

Travel Tip: Create Your Own Personal Liturgy

Travel Tip Tuesday: Create Your Own Personal Liturgy » asacredjourney.net

The journal I’m taking with me to Arizona next week. The bees might have been slightly influenced by Sue Monk Kidd…

I know we each have journey guides and spiritual midwives whose words we want to take with us when we travel, but why did they have to make their books so heavy? (Then again, don’t take anything out—those words are golden.)

If you’re wanting to take some inspiration with you on your journey but can’t manage the added weight (and really, who should take that much anyway?), why not consider turning your favorite poems, passages, blessings, and quotes into your own personal pilgrim liturgy?

Once you find the perfect journal for your journey, copy down the words that inspire you into the journal’s front pages and make them a part of your daily routine. Perhaps there’s a poem you’d like to read each morning of your pilgrimage, or a blessing that could ease you into rest each night. Maybe there’s a particular Scripture verse or phrase that expresses the theme of your search, and you want to see it each time you open your journal to write. That one goes on the front!

Put quotes that inspire all on one page for you to return to in challenging times, or simply when you have a long wait. And of course, leave some extra pages at the front to keep adding to your own personal liturgy as your journey continues. Inspiration and words of wisdom lie around every corner for those who seek the Sacred. You could also add images—sometimes they take us to our Sacred center far more easily than words.

If it’s a while until your next journey, consider creating a personal liturgy for the current season instead, placing it in the front of your current journal. God knows we could all use a little inspiration in the midst of winter (pray for us, Southern Hemispherians!).

Me? My next journey begins this Sunday. I’ll be spending two weeks in the Arizona desert, training to become a spiritual director. More on that next week, but until then, below are some bits of inspiration I’ll be adding to my own liturgy for the journey ahead (feel free to use them for yourself, too!).

WHAT I’M INCLUDING IN
MY OWN PERSONAL LITURGY

  • Poems by Hafiz, Rumi, and Mary Oliver

  • Compline readings from Celtic Daily Prayer and blessings by John O’Donohue

  • Psalms of ascent

  • Quotes from some of my favorite journey guides, including Danielle LaPorte (I’ll be starting here), Joseph Campbell (the journey genius), and Marianne Williamson (currently reading her bestseller, A Return to Love)

GO FURTHER…

What would you add to your journey journal as a part of your pilgrim liturgy?

Travel Tip: DIY Memento Pouch

Today I’m introducing a new Tuesday series called Travel Tip Tuesday, where I’ll be sharing some of my favorite travel tips for the enlightened traveler. Have a travel tip you’d like to share? Let me know here.

Travel Tip Tuesday: DIY Memento Pouch » asacredjourney.net

One of my favorite things to do while traveling is collect mementos along the way—ticket stubs, brochures, funny advertisements—even olive leaves from the Roman Forum have found their way into my pocket as I attempt to take with me just a little bit of the places I fall in love with. Truth be told, the olive leaves and Vatican ticket from that journey remained in the outside pocket of my purse for five years until I gave them to a friend—a small memento of a journey long since passed.

And you know how people sometimes find money in their coats when they put them on the following winter? Well I just recently gave away a rarely worn coat and in its pockets found a ticket stub from a flight to Russia, a National Express bus pass, and a bus ticket from a late night spent moving suitcases across town in London (and, for the sake of full disclosure, a handful of tissues). Though the real reason I still had these things after 4 years was because I had only worn the coat a few times since, discovering these items in my pockets brought back a flood of memories, and perhaps I kept them in my coat pocket all those years just because I loved the surprise of remembering.

I’m sure we all hold onto mementos like these with the best intentions. We’ll scrapbook! Or perhaps we’ll use them in a collage? Maybe we’ll frame them! But you know where mine usually end up? In a box in my closet (and the pockets of my bags and coats). So here’s a travel tip that I plan on following in the future: glue an envelope in the back of your travel journal, creating a pouch for all of your mementos (a DIY inspired by Moleskine). These mementos are tangible keepsakes of your experience and they deserve a place alongside your reflections, inviting you to journey once more and bringing to mind some of your most transformative memories as you flip through the pages and sift through the ticket stubs years down the road.

GO FURTHER…

Do you collect mementos from your travels? What do you do with them?

AND ONE MORE THING…

pilgrim-principlesDid you enter to win a copy of Pilgrim Principles last week over at The Cream to My Coffee? If so, head on over to see if you’ve won! If you’re the lucky one, Ashley will be connecting with you soon. And if you’re not? There’s another chance to win my book this week over at The Meaning Movement (ends 1/19 at midnight PST). enter here »

There’s still time to enter the other giveaways that began last week! Each item is an excellent resource for infusing your travels and daily life with spirituality and intention.

The Desire MapA copy of The Desire Map book by Danielle LaPorte
ends 12/14 at midnight PST
enter here »

"As I Lay Pondering" by Kayce HughlettA copy of As I Lay Pondering: daily invitations to
live a transformed life
by our January Pilgrim in Residence,
Kayce Hughlett
ends 12/15 at midnight PST
enter here »

Eat, Pray, LoveA copy of Eat, Pray, Love on DVD
ends 12/16 at midnight PST
enter here »

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Hi! I’m Lacy—your guide here at A Sacred Journey and a lover of food, books, spirituality, growing and making things, far-off places and lovely spaces. More »

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WISDOM FROM FELLOW SEEKERS

Pilgrim Podcast 02: Contemplative Activism with Ryan Kuja

Pilgrim Podcast 04: Ancestral Pilgrimage with Christine Valters Paintner

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