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A Sacred Journey

practicing pilgrimage at home and abroad

2 Signs You Can Always Trust

We’d all appreciate a sign from time to time to help us know the right path to take, wouldn’t we?

Pilgrims walking the Camino de Santiago de Compostela don’t necessarily need a map to make the journey—they simply need to follow the yellow arrows that indicate the direction of the path.

Just like the pilgrim on the road to Santiago de Compostela, there are arrows for the pilgrim on the interior journey, too—signs that you can always trust to lead you to your inner destination, whether you are a pilgrim abroad or in everyday life: what draws you in and what you have resistance to.

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S2:E7 | The Camino with Michael Snyder

The Camino de Santiago de Compostela is a centuries-old walking pilgrimage that has grown in popularity in recent years, attracting seekers from around the globe.

Learn more about the famed pilgrimage and how to tend to each stage of the journey in my conversation with Michael Snyder of Santiago de Compostela’s Pilgrim House, a welcome center and ministry for Camino pilgrims.

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How I Found Healing and a Lost Part of Myself on the Camino

This post is by my husband, Kyle, who just walked the Camino de Santiago this spring. Many of you have been following along with his journey, from his delay last fall due to injury and his uncertain departure this past March. He returned from the Camino safe and sound in early May, and I’m excited for him to finally share his experience here on the blog of walking this famous pilgrimage and returning home changed.

IMG_0350

I needed an adventure.

I needed to do something that I didn’t completely believe I could actually do but so very badly desired. And, that’s what I got, though I didn’t know quite what I was seeking at the time.

I recently walked the French Route of the Camino de Santiago from St. Pied de Port. A lot of pilgrims make this walk. It’s hard, but not so physically demanding that an 83-year-old can’t do it on his own. (I had the honor of walking with such an impressive soul.) One of the biggest dangers is walking too quickly before your body is accustomed to it, which takes a week or two. As I left home, I didn’t know if I would return home before making it all the way to Santiago (or to the coast in a town called Finisterre, where I really wanted complete my journey).

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I don’t Feel Prepared, and That’s Okay (Walking the Camino: Take 2)

I just dropped my husband Kyle off at the airport. He’s walking the Camino de Santiago—for real this time. Here are his final thoughts upon departure, and he plans on sharing new discoveries and pictures from the road when he returns in May.

I’m heading off on my own pilgrimage soon as well and will return at the end of March. Until then the Journey Shop will be closed and you won’t be seeing much of me here, but you can follow along on my journey through Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter. -Lacy 

Image by fellow pilgrim, Ryan Moore

Image by fellow pilgrim, Ryan Moore

I’ve been planning on walking the Camino for a few years now.

I was supposed to walk it last fall, but I injured myself (on a training hike, ironically). I’ve built up a grand vision in my mind of how I want this journey to be, and how I want it to change me. I’ve almost constructed a new version of myself—a man who looks like me but is much healthier, stronger, wiser, and has a clear direction in life; a man who truly knows who he is; the man I compare myself to, but have yet to find.

I hope to meet and become this man, and as my departure looms closer and closer, I feel the pressure to prepare for the trip—not only physically, but mentally and spiritually, too.

I don’t feel prepared.

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A Change of Plans & a Change of Perspective: Why I’m Not Walking the Camino…Yet

If you follow along closely, you might remember that my husband, Kyle, was planning to walk the Camino this September and into early October. That means he should be in Spain right now, but he’s not—instead he’s here with me in our new home. And while I’m grateful to have him by my side in this transition, I’m saddened that he’s had to put his journey on hold—at least from now. Here’s what happened, in his own words. -Lacy

Camino de Santiago de Compostela

For a couple of years now, I’ve been planning to walk The Camino de Santiago de Compostela.

This past May, I finally decided that it was time, and bought the tickets; I would be leaving on the 31st of August. It felt surreal for a while. Buying plane tickets abroad is something that I had only done once before. But the reality began to sink in—I would actually be going to Spain to walk the Camino, and I’d be leaving in just over three months.

I was so excited.

Soon, my heart had already boarded a plane and was already walking. My heart had already arrived in Paris in the early morning on the 1st of September (the route called the Camino Francés, which I would be walking, begins in France). In Paris, I had seen, tasted, smelled, touched, and experienced as much as one really could in one day (mostly to redeem the last time I was there, when I got the flu). I had stayed with an acquaintance I met at the Taizé Community two years ago and had already taken a train to Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port, France, where I began walking the 500 miles to Santiago de Compostela, Spain.

My heart was already fully on the Camino, while I was spending the summer preparing for my body to join.

I’m a fairly active person. I like to walk or ride my bicycle when I can, and I regularly exercise to continue recovering from a back surgery I had several years ago. Still, I felt I needed to do some serious hiking to break in some new shoes and gear I’d bought for my impending long walk in Spain.

beginning the hike

looking happy and healthy before we began the hike (from left to right: me, my friend Brian, and Paul)

Two months before my actual departure, I  made plans to join my friend Paul as he hiked another section of the Pacific Crest Trail, which he spent 6 weeks hiking the previous summer (read about his journey here). The section of the trail we’d be hiking was 75 miles, and we would walk it in 5 days. That’s 15 miles a day, which is around the daily amount that I’d be walking on the Camino, so I thought it would be a nice way to warm up and get used to walking day after day with a pack on my back.

Makes sense, right?

one of the many alpine lakes along the trail

one of the many alpine lakes along the trail

However, while beautiful, it was far different than I had expected. The terrain of the Pacific Crest Trail is completely different than that of the Camino. The mountains are steeper and the trails haven’t been beaten down by centuries of pilgrims and people just traveling between towns. No—this was serious backcountry hiking, and my body let me know. Not even 24 hours in, I already had blisters forming on my feet in places I’d never had blisters before. My knees were aching, my back was stiff, and it took everything in me just to keep up.

I returned accomplished, but physically defeated. After a week or so,  I assumed I would be feeling better, but that wasn’t the case. I soon learned that the hike had given me an injury that typically takes a few months to really heal. I began icing and popping anti-inflammatories like candy. This helped, but it wasn’t enough. “If you weren’t traveling soon, I would put you in a boot for six weeks,” my podiatrist (who also happens to be my uncle) said.

My heart sank. What that really meant? It wasn’t a good idea for me to go. While doing what I thought was preparation for the camino, I’d sustained injuries that would prevent me from going.

The day following this realization was dismal until I realized that while my desire was postponed, it was not stolen. I could change my plans and leave for the Camino the following spring instead. It would give my body a chance to heal, I would be around as we settled into our new home, and I could approach my journey with more intention than my busy summer had allowed. With each of these realizations, I gained new perspective, and less than a day after accepting temporary defeat, I was pleased and grateful for the change of plans and the time to heal.

Until this point, I reluctantly believed that the pain was worth the beauty. Beauty was, without a doubt, the only mercy the Pacific Crest Trail offered me. But perhaps the mountains were meeting my deeper needs in another way. Perhaps the pain was serendipitous, giving me a chance to nurse other wounds in my body unrelated to the hiking trip that still need to heal, and another chance to become more acquainted with my desire.

Perhaps no journey is complete without growth, and worthwhile growth is often unlikely without some discomfort or pain.

I didn’t go hike the Pacific Crest Trail seeking injury, but I choose to believe that there was meaning to my suffering. Though plans have changed, I am look to leaving for the Camino once again and with new perspective,  imagining the day when I reach Santiago de Compostela as a different person, more keenly aware of my desires and my wounds, ready to explore what my own healing can bring to world.

GO FURTHER…

Has your journey ever been postponed by unexpected events? What lessons did these surprises teach you? How did they impact your journey going forward? Leave your response to the questions or the post in the comments.

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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the pilgrim at home

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