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Sally and others,
<p>Here is my 2 cents.
<p>Pilgrim writing is exactly what I did on the Camino. Here is the routine
I followed.
<p>When I boarded the plane to Paris I wrote down my intentions for the
Camino. <i>To find my purpose, to find self love, to be a better parent,
to be aware, to not judge others, to meditate, to face my fears etc.</i>
I read each intention and practiced it at some point everyday as I walked.
(this may seem to formal to some of you, but I needed the discipline.)
When I say I practiced it's because I didn't know how to address some of
my issues, but the Camino gave me a safe place from which to face my fears
and "practice" for the real world. Like rowing training on the water before
race day. I could make mistakes on the Camino and learn from them before
going home to live my Camino.
<p>Then, every day I wrote in my diary. I wrote my pilgrim feelings from
my heart without judgment of myself or others. When I picked up a pen to
write, I was present and in the moment allowing me to express my emotions
freely. I wrote the date, the destination, the weather and the number of
kilometers I walked that day at the top of the page. I often wrote something
about the physical reactions as well as the emotional reactions of the
day. (this comes from my training as a competitive rower...we always kept
a training diary that included what type of workout and what was accomplished,
always noting something about how we felt) I didn't write much about the
history of the regions. In total I wrote 192 pages in a red Super Conquerant
graph paper note book 11 X 17 cms.
<p>Ironically, on the way home on the plane from Paris to Toronto, I read
my entire diary for the first time. As I read each page, I listed the lessons
and gifts of the Camino on the back pages of my diary. I discovered there
were 55 lessons and gifts, over 29 days of walking. Not bad.
<p>I found my purpose in life, found the meaning of self love, faced my
fears and had many other profound experiences and revelations. I believe
this is because I went on a journey with an idea about where I wanted to
end up and that wasn't Santiago. I walked each day looking ahead in anticipation
of reaching Cebreiro. I had read about a miracle on the mountain and believed
that something special was waiting for me on Cebreiro. I was so right.
Santiago was the walking destination but Cebreiro was the spiritual destination.
<p>Returning home I read and re-read by diary. I took a creative writing
course at a local university that taught me how to write my most intimate
thoughts. I wrote poetry, which I had never done before. I wrote short
stories about the Camino and fairy tales too. Thanks to the support of
the people in this group and Santiagobis responding to my stories in email
format, I continued my "pilgrim writing". And now I am writing a pilgrim
book about my spiritual journey called My Camino. I found a publisher who
believes in my pilgrim story and I am on my way to Cebreiro again.
<p>Thanks for asking these questions as I believe it is so important to
capture the words of the journey. Someone told me that a storyteller records
history. That means if we can write or tell stories, then we are recording
the history of the Camino. Now that is very special.
<p>Buen Camino,
<p>Sue
<br>sue.kenneyasympatico.ca
<br><A HREF="http://www.suekenney.ca/mycamino.htm">http://www.suekenney.ca/mycamino.htm</A>
<br>
<p>Sally Haden wrote:
<br>
<blockquote TYPE=CITE>consider that sort of 'travel writing', if it can
be labelled such. More
<br>like 'pilgrim writing' , but I doubt many publishers have heard of
this term
<br>as a recognized genre!
<p>Would anyone like to add suggestions, comments, information, book
<br>recommendations.... about writing on the subject of one's own pilgrim
<br>experience in particular, or about the Camino as a place for travel
writing?
<br> I can't imagine that travel writers ever rise to the rarified
heights of
<br>'richness', but perhaps it might bulk out a modest pocket from time
to time,
<br>and keep one's fingers busy.
<p>Sally
<br>Lancashire, UK
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