Inspiration for your journey to God!

Category: Camino de Santiago (Page 1 of 3)

posts related to my pilgrimage on the Camino de Santiago

Keep your head down, take one step at a time

keep your head down, take one step at a time
Hills and Valleys

Keep your head down

“Keep your head down, take one step at a time,” is what I found myself thinking and telling one of my companions on the Camino de Santiago. During the coronavirus pandemic, I’m feeling called to continue writing about my Camino and the lessons learned. As I shelter in place, I think about how I’m being called. I wonder what the life-altering lessons are. I wonder how I will be forever changed. As I pondered all these things, I thought to myself, “I’ve been here before.” Indeed, it was just a year ago that I was asking myself these same questions. So, now is the perfect time to get back to my Camino journal to continue to elaborate on the lessons learned last year. I’m pretty sure, the lessons can be applied to this current communal journey we’re on. So here it goes.

Two days into our trip and the first day of actual hiking we tackled the Pyrenees. We had a feeling it was going to be difficult. Included in our preparation was reading posts, books and websites about the Camino. We consulted with our parish priest who had completed the journey just a year before. All I can say is you will never be truly prepared for what you will encounter while climbing the Pyrenees mountains. You will never know until you attempt it yourself. My descriptions can’t even come close to what it was like.

Take one step at a time

Imagine walking in a straight line vertically! THAT’S what it felt like. There was no plateau, no flattening, no reprieve, just constant uphill walking for almost 5 miles. Each time I looked ahead, I felt discouraged and wondered how the heck I could keep on going. As the days continued, we would encounter some really steep inclines up and down. Somedays, the incline came at the end of a very long hike.

After the first few days, I decided I couldn’t keep looking up the hill to see where I was heading. I had to keep my eyes focused on where I was planting my feet. I decided to focus on every small step forward. One step at a time. I could DO that! So as I continued on the Camino, the moment I noticed I was coming to a steep incline upward, I would immediately look down at my feet and simply focus on the next step.

Focus on the present

Then it occurred to me! The lesson became clear. In life we will all experience hills and valleys. Sometimes those hills seem insurmountable. We go from start to finish in our minds and wonder how we’re going to make it. It seems like a long road because of our approach. We run from the present to the future. If this Camino taught me anything, it taught me that I can get through the steepest hills if I stay focused on the present.

Hills and valleys will no doubt find their way into our lives but we CAN scale those mountains. We just have to change our perception and approach to the hill. There is no way around it – the only way is through, one small step at a time!

Remembering this lesson has helped me cope with this pandemic. One day at a time. I can’t focus on “what ifs” – I can only focus on what IS. I can’t grumble at the fact that I can’t socialize like I used to or be as carefree as I used to. But I can focus on the fact that today I am healthy, praise be to God. I can embrace the solitude and silence. It’s here to teach me something! Our God is so awesome, He’s given many of us an opportunity to retreat for an extended period of time without feeling guilty. Can we settle down and hear His voice?

We win

I’m taking this opportunity to ponder the lessons of this current time and the correlations between this time and other times in our history – our salvation history! I trust that we will be triumphant yet again! Thanks be to God!

God bless you!

We are COMMANDED to love!

Love is a many splendored thing
Sunrise is Spain

We are COMMANDED to love! I keep coming back to love as I read through my Camino journal. In it I jotted down lessons learned along the way. Each day I was simply too exhausted to take the time to write in detail. So I recalled various events of my day and listed the lessons. It was my intention to “unpack” it all and share when I got back. Here I am, almost three months later, and I’m only up to item #2 out of 15 (and I’m sure that number will grow as I continue to process – I could never have imagined the impact of this journey).

Lessons learned thus far

2. Be content with yourself and your gifts. I sat on my porch one afternoon trying to remember the circumstances. I’m guessing it came from a difficult first week. Three days into my journey getting wicked blisters, being winded going up hills. I came into this with a less than humble mentality, knowing I had the chutzpah to finish what I started.

Having a competitive nature didn’t help my situation. My blisters were the result of me trying to keep up with others. I found myself comparing myself to others along the way. I watched as they passed me, having no difficulty at all, as I struggled to take my next breath. Humbling? For sure!

In the silence of the Camino, I was able to see and feel Christ’s immense love for me AS I AM! I was able to register the truth of my role as an integral part of the mystical body of Christ. I have a purpose, I am unique. I may not have the gifts and talents others have, but I have my own, which no one else has. I have to remember this, be content with my gifts and talents and love myself as Christ loves me!

While on the Camino, as I was beating myself up for not being as quick or as fit as some of the other pilgrims, I eventually realized that no matter how fast or fit we all ended up at the same place.

There was a lesson in everything we did and experienced on the Camino. The best part of it all was seeing how once surrender was embraced, once I stopped ragging on myself (God’s precious and good creation), strength, perseverance and peace followed – no, they WON!

I began to embrace my limitations. I loved myself as Christ loves me. It was ok when other pilgrims passed me. I was okay with being winded and having to stop on an incline – it’s how I honored my body. It didn’t matter to me that I was the last one in my group to reach a certain spot. I embraced the fact that regardless of when I finished, my beautifully created body and tired, strong feet carried me so far. I was enough, I was strong, I was loved!

get out of there

Once I got out of my head and into my heart, I actually got out of my own way. Several weeks in, I felt stronger, I was less winded, I was faster and yet I cared less about my speed and stamina then. What a great lesson! Love yourself, you are God’s creation. He loves you as you are! You are enough! You have something to offer this world that NO ONE else has. Once you begin to take that to heart, nothing and no one can phase you!

The Big Book of Christian Mysticism

Shortly after processing this second lesson, I came across this message in The Big Book of Christian Mysticism by Carl McColman:

God is love. God loves all of us and wants us to experience abundant life. This means abiding in love, love of God and love of neighbors as ourselves. Through prayer and worship, meditation and silence, we can commune with God, experience his presence, have our consciousness transformed by his Spirit, participate in his loving nature, and be healed and renewed in that love.

This new life (what the New Testament calls “the mind of Christ”) will not only bring us joy and happiness (even when we suffer) but also will empower us to be ambassadors for God, to bring God’s love and joy and happiness to others. there is much work to be done, and the task is overwhelming. Even our own need is very great, for we tend to resist God’s love, even as we hunger for it. Yet, God Continually calls us back to his love and continually empowers us to face the challenge of bringing hope to our broken world.

we are commanded to love

We are commanded to love our neighbors as ourselves. How can we possibly love our neighbors as God commands, if we don’t know how to love ourselves? I challenge you to take some time to evaluate how well you love yourself. If you view yourself as less than enough, then I would venture to say you don’t love yourself enough.

Start loving yourself. We are COMMANDED to love. Get out of your own way and all good things will follow. Trust me, I know! God bless you!

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