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The Beatitudes of the Pilgrim #1

Cathedral at Burgos
Cathedral at Burgos

BLESSED ARE YOU PILGRIM, IF YOU DISCOVER THAT THE CAMINO OPENS YOUR EYES TO WHAT IS NOT SEEN. The Camino is a walk but it is not a walk to just take a walk. It is a walk designed to give you an experience if you are open to it. Let me repeat that, it is a walk designed to give you an experience if you are open to it. It has been going on for 1200 years and all those millions of pilgrims that have walked over that time speak to its power.

Other news Lucia is in Scotland after going on a hike on Mt Aetna, Sicily with a group of Camino vets. I wish that I could cut and paste her description over here. Maybe tomorrow.

Camino Repair and Towing Project #2: starting today and for one week put a bandaid (plaster ) on one of your feet even if you don’t need it just to celebrate healing. And maybe even put it on top of your foot where folks can see it and wear it proudly!

I go by Kelly’s house twice a day on average and I am reminded to wonder how he doing. He has spent the most time of all of us on the trail and must be toughly baked by now. He was scheduled to leave on the 15th. It will be great fun to see him soon.

OK, have to get to work and then to the hospital. Have to get started on my income tax project which is due in nine days. My friend Larry said that he would help me with it. Nice. So, so long for today, Love Phil.

My Flan Report

My pack waiting for me.  Note bread for later meal.
My pack waiting for me. Note bread for later meal.

Yes, got the flan made this AM. Right, last minute. And Rebecca said to make sure to tell you that it was Jello brand in a box. OK, right, but the directions are in English AND Spanish so that should count. It took me twenty minutes from box to refrigerator, not that it is a race. Remember tomorrow we have a brand new weekly project.

I have a quote for you from church on Sunday here on Vashon. There was a response that we repeated I think three times just to make sure … “If today you hear his voice, harden not your hearts”. You may have heard this but I am passing this on, just in case.

It has come to dawn on me that my Camino is starting to talk to me here just as she did in Spain. She says that I have too much going on and I have to slow my pace to avoid injury. So, I am going to try and do something with the blog to give me a little break for ten days. If I did a post each day coming up on one of the ten Pilgrim Beatitudes it would be less effort and still fun and profitable.

And I did hear His “voice” last night in between sleeps. I put that in parenthesis because He just occurred rather than I heard something. The message in paraphrased form: “Your Dilly Dallies on Earth are only tapas. Your complaint that there is not enough time to DD sufficiently with everyone will be solved in heaven because time will be unlimited forever.” Yea, that’s what I’m talking about!

So, here we go off again. Love to you and yours, Phil.

The Flipside

What it looks like.
What it looks like.

This is the other side of the piece of paper. It is not knowledge that is secret but it was gotten at some sacrifice and is a benefit of taking that less used road.

The Beatitudes of the Pilgrim

1 – Blessed are you pilgrim, if you discover that the “camino” opens your eyes to what is not seen.
2 – Blessed are you pilgrim, if what concerns you most is not to arrive, as to arrive with others.
3 – Blessed are you pilgrim, when you contemplate the “camino” and you discover it is full of names and dawns.
4 – Blessed are you pilgrim, because you have discovered that the authentic “camino” begins when it is completed.
5 – Blessed are you pilgrim, if your knapsack is emptying of things and your heart does not know where to hang up so many feelings and emotions.
6 – Blessed are you pilgrim, if you discover that one step back to help another is more valuable than a hundred forward without seeing what is at your side.
7 – Blessed are you pilgrim, when you don’t have words to give thanks for everything that surprises you at every twist and turn of the way.
8 – Blessed are you pilgrim, if you search for the truth and make of the “camino” a life and of your life a “way”, in search of the one who is the Way, the Truth and the Life.
9 – Blessed are you pilgrim if on the way you meet yourself and gift yourself with time, without rushing, so as not to disregard the image in your heart.
10 – Blessed are you pilgrim, if you discover that the “camino” holds a lot of silence; and the silence of prayer; and the prayer of meeting with God who is waiting for you.

OK, there it is. Love, Phil.

I Carried This the Whole Way, Just For You.

With Kelly.
With Kelly.

I picked this half piece of paper up early on in a quiet church. There was an old nun sweeping and smiling. It was there for the taking and I didn’t know it at the time but I brought it for you. I will try to copy it word for word and not change anything; it is so precious.

The Way: Parable and Reality

The journey makes you a pilgrim. Because the way to Santiago is not only a track to be walked in order to get somewhere, nor it is a test to reach any reward. El Camino de Santiago is a parable and a reality at once because it is done both within and outside in the specific time that takes to walk each stage, and along the entire life if only you allow the Camino to get into you, to transform you and to make to a pilgrim.

The Camino makes you simpler, because the lighter the backpack the less strain to your back and the more you experience how little you need to be alive.

The Camino makes you brother/sister. Whatever you have you must be ready to share because even if you started on your own, you will meet companions.

The Camino breeds about community: community that greets the other, that takes interest in how the walk is going for the other, that talks and shares with the other.

The Camino makes demands on you. You must get up even before the sun in spite of tiredness or blisters; you must walk in the darkness of night while dawn is growing; you must get the rest that will keep you going.

The Camino calls you to contemplate, to be amazed, to welcome, to interiorize, to stop, to be quiet, to listen to, to admire, to bless… nature, our companions on the journey, our own selves, God.

Warning

I want to warn you that my inner romantic has escaped and is, well I don’t know where he is now really. He may have first left in early August around Estrella in Northeastern Spain. The last thing that he said was something about running with the bulls.

Be careful with him if he appears. Not that he is dangerous really but he has a tendency to be beyond normal, to talk poetically, to promise you anything. He is often outside of time and will trap you in endless dilly dally. He thinks that God made heaven just so the three of you could be together, imagine?

I just found a few paragraphs recently that he wrote and they may be helpful:

“I went to Spain to do the Camino with openness, with room for it to join with me. That’s all, really. And what I got in return was a hundred fold.

” The Spanish people: I remember an old woman begging outside of the Cathedral at Burgos, dressed all in black, she was so beautiful. I gave her some money and kissed her, I couldn’t resist. I remember a woman who brought us cold Cokes as we stumbled past her house in the heat. We didn’t have anything to give her but I made a motion with my rosary that we would pray for her and she understood and was happy. I remember a farmer herding his dairy cows down the road and I wanted to shake his hand. He made a motion like his hands were dirty so I kissed him on the whiskery cheek, nothing more, nothing less. I remember walking with a Spanish pilgrim who pulled out a candy bar and broke it in half and was in the process of handing half to me and it fell down into the dust of the Camino. I picked it up and he said that it was OK that he had another but I felt a need to eat that one as a communion with the trail and it’s millions of pilgrims. His smile signaled to me that he understood.

“Then there was the scenery that was knockout beautiful. And the agriculture which was ever present, robust, varied, feed the world awesome. There were the ancient stone bridges, stone buildings, roads and fountains to remind us that plenty of people had worked very hard to make us comfortable.

“The Camino attracts a certain set of people that come from all over the world and each has a story. Some are pilgrims to start with, others become pilgrims. You can communicate with them more or less according to your combined language abilities and this is major fun. I don’t know about major fun but a lot of communication takes place through the universal language of hunger, thirst and pain. In the end all sorts and flavors of people meet, talk, share, eat and drink with you. They listen and encourage and inspire you. They are your angels getting you from shade to shade or water to water or from town to town. Just as you are their angel.

“There are huge cathedrals at one end of the scale and little simple churches in all the small towns. OK, I was ready for that. But what else was every size, color, shape and variety of material reminder that God is present in the form of crucifixes, statues, shrines, collections and you name it all along the way.

“And I went into every church that was open, went into monasteries, convents and other meeting places. Prayed with nuns and brothers. Took Mass in a cave, outside, inside in small churches and Cathedrals. Passed out from heat exhaustion at the high point of one Mass and was caught in the arms of a woman named Grace. Falling into the arms of Grace, no joke. Shook hands and talked with the Bishop at Burgos. Was blessed along with my fellow pilgrims by priests in numerous places along the route.

“OK, so this is the evidence of how I flirted with, danced with, cavorted with and got drunk on Spain and the Camino. And in the end we made love.”

Yea, see what I mean? Look, if you run into my inner romantic would you please tell him to check in. We need to talk, you know what I mean. Thanks, Phil.

A New Day

Bike Pilgrim.
Bike Pilgrim.
Watermelon on Table.
Watermelon on Table.
Beautiful Crucifix.
Beautiful Crucifix.

Hola! That’s a good start. I hope that those of you that are reentering are making progress. I am. Things are starting to click together for me. We will talk about that soon. Now, I have to go and help a friend with a project. Some things need to be done while the sun shines.

I just want to say that I would love to talk to you all more. That’s all my buddies but specifically am talking about my Camino buddies now. Some I haven’t talked to at all and others not enough. It will come together. Just wrestling mostly with all the new communication methods that people prefer, Skype, FaceTime, Apple message, email. I have to simplify things. Anyway, we will talk soon, it is mostly technical problems occurring.

And then new people are coming to the blog to read and I want to encourage them. You folks perhaps need to just read along for a while to get the flow of this or scroll down to read past posts to pick up the thread. All good. Love, Phil.

Buen Camino!

Fresh corn on the cob!
Fresh corn on the cob, Vashon, WA.

Rebecca's amazing flowers,Vashon.
Rebecca’s amazing flowers.
Dilly Dally Tapas.
Dilly Dally Tapas, Vashon.

I remember the first few days on the way out of St Jean Pied de Port we said to each other “Buen Camino” and it felt good like yea, we’re real pilgrims now. But it didn’t take long for the novelty to where off and the aches, pains, blisters, sunburn to start showing up to the point where we were hurting bad, discouraged and maybe laid up for a few days. Getting broken in I suppose is the term. And somehow some way we kept going and then when we looked each other in the eye and said “Buen Camino” it really meant something. Something more like yea, we are still here still doing it.

Somehow, I am feeling that again this morning. I just want to say “Buen Camino!” to you and to myself. This reentry is tough and yes I/we were discouraged but heck look at us, we’re still doing it, right? Our amazing resilience is something that we know. This realization is one of the gifts of the Camino that Lucia was talking about. A gift that we can employ to move forward. So, “Buen Camino!”.