Camino Frances from Saint-Jean-Pied-de-Port to Santiago de Compostela

Why walk the Camino? Part II

Today was an 80+ degree walk through the Meseta; lots of sweat, tight muscles, backs carrying too heavy backpacks, and some tears. Another four days of walking in the hot, arid stretch until we hit the cooler hills of Leon and Galicia. I feel as though my body has been through a prolonged exposure of heat and overuse. The next few walking days are shorter though, and temperatures are expected to be 5-10 degrees cooler.

Listening to the Pilgrims for two weeks, the Camino exposes fear, doubt, and insecurities. For most pilgrims, the Camino is in their head – planning the day, walking, heat, carrying enough water, nightly albergue reservations, where to eat dinner, etc. I’ve met too many pilgrims not making albergue reservations, finding the town full, and having to walk another 6-10 kilometers for a bed. I hadn’t predicted the level of anxiety pilgrims would need to overcome to walk another day.

Reasons given by other pilgrims on why they are walking the Camino –

⁃ Significant birthday, reset life priorities, health scare

⁃ Marital separation or divorce, spouse death

⁃ I want to be in charge of day, escape normal daily structure

⁃ Friendship, someone to speak with about issues and observations

⁃ Between jobs (younger adults)

⁃ To find my divine self, peaceful and connecting, listen to God

⁃ To recover from daughter’s mental health scare during depression

⁃ To be more tolerant of others, less judgmental, an act for someone else

Burgos at night
Arriving after 7.5 walking hours
Rapeseed covers the Meseta
Colorful daily sunrise over wheat fields
6 am start allowed for Milky Way views

6 responses to “Why walk the Camino? Part II”

  1. joelrosowguruart Avatar
    joelrosowguruart

    JohnGood evening! Your ability to endure exceeds most people’s which is a great asset walking the Camino. They are indeed fortunate to have you along with them on the walk. Your summary listing the reasons people walk the Camino provides insight and understanding. A portfolio of your photos with captions and commentary would make for a beautiful book.Are you using a Nikon or perhaps a Leica?😀Glad you are thriving despite various challenges.You remain close in our hearts John. LoveJoel

    Sent from the all new AOL app for iOS

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    1. John Boselli Avatar
      John Boselli

      I’m using my Apple iPhone!

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  2. Dick Rochester Avatar
    Dick Rochester

    I admire you if you are packing a full backpack! I used a transport company to take my main luggage from hotel to hotel. That way my old back could handle a day pack of about 15 pounds (rain gear, water, snacks, first aid kit, compeed, dry socks, and other odds and ends).

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    1. John Boselli Avatar
      John Boselli

      my pack is only 13 pounds and I carry each day, plus water. My bigger issue is limit daily walk to no more than 30 km

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      1. Dick Rochester Avatar
        Dick Rochester

        Yes, those 30 km plus days are hard on the feet. Don tells me you are doing the whole thing in 30 days.My wife, sister, and I took 40 days, six of which were rest days. We still got blisters and various joint pains. Ibuprofen and gin & tonics got us through! It was also very hot when we did it.

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  3. kimberleyalbanese Avatar
    kimberleyalbanese

    Wow – many of your photos are mesmerizing. I can only imagine what that must be like in person. 

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