GentleWarriorPilgrim
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- Camino Francés 16
Camino Inglés & Finisterre 22
Hi! I’m new here; I decided to join because I googled my question for about an hour to no real avail and have found this forum helpful / interesting in the past as a non-member.
A little background - the Camino Frances was my first pilgrimage in 2016. Ended up being life changing though I didn’t realize it until a couple years later In 2018, I walked the North Downs Pilgrims Way in England with my now husband, and we did the first leg of the Via Francigena to Dover also. (Via Francigena is a lifelong goal!) He also completed the Gudbrandsdalsleden alone in Norway in 2015.
We have tried our best to and love adopting a pilgrim’s mindset in our daily lives. It just makes life easier and happier. Along with this, we aspire to go on pilgrimage at least every couple years.
All that being said, I know my Dad (who is 72) would have gone on pilgrimage when he was younger. He feels he is too old now and has some health concerns that might be dangerous. Also, my mother-in-law just passed away a few weeks ago. (This all connects, I promise!)
My husband’s and my upcoming 2022 pilgrimage will be on the Camino Inglés and we will also walk to Finisterre. Because we have done our pilgrimages before and have experienced many blessings already for ourselves by doing so, I’d like to walk, in a sense, for our loved ones who can’t.
I’ve heard of carrying prayers or small objects for others, and I know I can always light a candle and say a prayer at the cathedral in Santiago. But where do you leave those objects or do you? Is there a traditional way that I can walk for my loved ones who can’t? (Also, I am a Methodist, but carry devotional medals, which my Dad taught me about. I mention this to say, if there is any religious ritual that will help me walk for another’s blessings, I am open to that.)
Hopefully, I posted this in the right section. Thanks for your help!
A little background - the Camino Frances was my first pilgrimage in 2016. Ended up being life changing though I didn’t realize it until a couple years later In 2018, I walked the North Downs Pilgrims Way in England with my now husband, and we did the first leg of the Via Francigena to Dover also. (Via Francigena is a lifelong goal!) He also completed the Gudbrandsdalsleden alone in Norway in 2015.
We have tried our best to and love adopting a pilgrim’s mindset in our daily lives. It just makes life easier and happier. Along with this, we aspire to go on pilgrimage at least every couple years.
All that being said, I know my Dad (who is 72) would have gone on pilgrimage when he was younger. He feels he is too old now and has some health concerns that might be dangerous. Also, my mother-in-law just passed away a few weeks ago. (This all connects, I promise!)
My husband’s and my upcoming 2022 pilgrimage will be on the Camino Inglés and we will also walk to Finisterre. Because we have done our pilgrimages before and have experienced many blessings already for ourselves by doing so, I’d like to walk, in a sense, for our loved ones who can’t.
I’ve heard of carrying prayers or small objects for others, and I know I can always light a candle and say a prayer at the cathedral in Santiago. But where do you leave those objects or do you? Is there a traditional way that I can walk for my loved ones who can’t? (Also, I am a Methodist, but carry devotional medals, which my Dad taught me about. I mention this to say, if there is any religious ritual that will help me walk for another’s blessings, I am open to that.)
Hopefully, I posted this in the right section. Thanks for your help!