It’s just a road. That’s really all it is. It’s a 798 kilometer footpath, winding from France to Spain.
The road is littered with hostels, inns, stone churches, and about 7 billion tourist shops selling all manner of effluvia, such as seashell-shaped toilet-paper holders.
But in the end, the Camino de Santiago is just a road. That’s all it can ever be.
The difference is, of course, when you’re on this road, you’re actually THERE.
Which is rare. To be present. To be here. Now. There are so many times in life when I’m not actually here. Oh sure, I’m here physically. Yes. But I’m not fully in this current moment.
And even though this present moment is all I have, I often waste it, thinking about past or future moments, and totally miss what’s in front of me.
But out there, on this footpath, for some reason you give yourself permission to be in The Moment. And because of this, time moves differently. A day feels like a week. A week becomes a nanosecond.
And then, there
are the people.
You meet people out there. They come from all over the world. From every faith. From every thought-system. People you might otherwise never be friends with.
On this highway, I walked alongside Mennonites, shared supper with Sufi Muslims, broke bread with Korean Buddhist monks, prayed Protestant prayers alongside a Hindu family, as we all visited an ancient Catholic shrine.
Once, I split a bottle of wine with an elderly Episcopal priest. We were in a hostel. That evening, a group of college kids from Texas, from a prominent Baptist college, were—for lack of a better term—Bible thumping.
The students were trying to argue with the minister about the nature of heaven and hell and the nature of God. They were using the anvil-like tones of the Modern American Evangelical who just wants to pick a fight.
The elderly priest…
