SallyandtheFox
New Member
- Time of past OR future Camino
- 08/05/2023
For 2024 Pilgrims: €50,- donation = 1 year with no ads on the forum + 90% off any 2024 Guide. More here. (Discount code sent to you by Private Message after your donation) |
---|
Thank you, that's helpful, I will visit if I don't perk up soon. Just walking there feels like a bit feat today!May you feel better soon @SallyandtheFox!
If you need to see someone, there is a Centro de Salud in Estella.
P.º de la Inmaculada, 39
The mind and heart are the part no doc can help. And you're right. All part of the path.
Holding things lightly is a skill, one that the camino sometimes forces us to learn.
Grf.
Buen camino...May there be ease, and health!
(And do take a covid test. It's still around.)
I understand your frustration, but do give yourself time to heal. I think @VNwalking 's advice is good too. Rule out covid to help your diagnosis and keep others safe. Hope your recovery is speedy. Buen caminoSo I should be Day 8 into my walk but I've gone down with some sort of nasty throat infection and fever and have had to spend the last 2 nights hauled-up in a hotel in Estella trying/hoping to recover soon - still feeling rotten, bedridden. (Have got supplies from local pharmacy)
Perhaps there are others feeling miserable and defeated and alone in other hotel rooms along the way? Here is your thread!
It feels so difficult to stop when all the momentum is to go on, although I know my body needs rest. Difficult not to put pressure on my body to hurry up and get better, when it needs the time it needs and my being impatient with it won't help. And it's made me feel super low - all the sad stuff coming. I know this is the path, too..
Get better soon John!Sitting in a hotel in Cee with a little gastro bug that makes thinking about food ( let alone walking) unbearable.
Thank you Valerie. I have had a very difficult year with multiple bereavements so there is a lot to work through. XMy heart goes out to you. Not at all what you'd planned, but as you have realised, it's part of what is & will be YOUR Camino. My suggestion: ball your eyes out, & let all the disappointments & sadnesses of your life wash out in the process. It will make room for a clearer, freer path ahead.
Your survival through this spot is part of your journey of resilience which can ultimately inspire yourself & others.
I pray that you feel better really soon. You are not alone in your little room. You have a huge family if us sending you our best wishes from right around the world.
We hear you. You are in the right place, & this was meant to be. Take all the time/ time out that you need . The Camino has this way of being able to strip everything else away & putting us in touch with exactly what we need to deal with. Prayers are with youThank you Valerie. I have had a very difficult year with multiple bereavements so there is a lot to work through. X
.
Cdeortega, I hear you. I pray that you hear you, too. You said that your mind is kicking & screaming for missing 2 days walking. You can always get transport back, or super-enjoy every other day to compensate. The Camino, as you are experiencing, takes on so much more than the physical feet moving us along the ground journey. This was always going to be your Camino right now. Maybe listening to your body's voice is something you are refining. Maybe this huge feeling of disappointment about missing 50km is allowing the floodgates to spill open much more load that you have locked up inside.I am currently alone in a hotel room feeling very low also.
I made a tough decision this morning when I was preparing for my day’s walk from Tosantos. I began my journey from St Jean with a broken toe (occurred 2 weeks from my departure but I felt I was still to go). I awoke in Grañon (beautiful time at the donativo at San Juan Bautista) with pain in front of my ankle on same foot as broken toe. I hobbled my way to Tosantos thinking it was just a kink I needed to work out of my foot (no pain standing, sitting; only when walking). But this morning there was no improvement. So, I took a taxi into Burgos (my mind was screaming and kicking to pass my two days of walking into Burgos). I have an appt. with a PT tomorrow and the dear young man at my hotel is asking me to seriously think about seeing a doctor before my PT appt.
So many emotions going through me currently…don’t want to give up my heart’s desire of 10 years to walk this journey.
Hoping the PT can get me on my way.
Sounds very challenging. You've done amazing well with a broken toe! Go gently with yourself xI am currently alone in a hotel room feeling very low also.
I made a tough decision this morning when I was preparing for my day’s walk from Tosantos. I began my journey from St Jean with a broken toe (occurred 2 weeks from my departure but I felt I was still to go). I awoke in Grañon (beautiful time at the donativo at San Juan Bautista) with pain in front of my ankle on same foot as broken toe. I hobbled my way to Tosantos thinking it was just a kink I needed to work out of my foot (no pain standing, sitting; only when walking). But this morning there was no improvement. So, I took a taxi into Burgos (my mind was screaming and kicking to pass my two days of walking into Burgos). I have an appt. with a PT tomorrow and the dear young man at my hotel is asking me to seriously think about seeing a doctor before my PT appt.
So many emotions going through me currently…don’t want to give up my heart’s desire of 10 years to walk this journey.
Hoping the PT can get me on my way.
We too feel poorly, both my husband and myself have horrendous coughs and had sore throats before it. It is getting us down and we are doing it together, so take heart that you are not suffering alone. I literally just said if we felt this poorly at home we would struggle to go to work let alone try to force our bodies to walk any distance. Take care and rest where and however you can. Wishing you a speedy recovery.So I should be Day 8 into my walk but I've gone down with some sort of nasty throat infection and fever and have had to spend the last 2 nights hauled-up in a hotel in Estella trying/hoping to recover soon - still feeling rotten, bedridden. (Have got supplies from local pharmacy)
Perhaps there are others feeling miserable and defeated and alone in other hotel rooms along the way? Here is your thread!
It feels so difficult to stop when all the momentum is to go on, although I know my body needs rest. Difficult not to put pressure on my body to hurry up and get better, when it needs the time it needs and my being impatient with it won't help. And it's made me feel super low - all the sad stuff coming. I know this is the path, too..
Sending love. I understand, having felt this kind of disappointment in different but very similar circumstances. The heart hurts and weighing that against the gratitude you feel now (which will grow with time, if I am an example) doesn't stop the hurting. As was said earlier, this is your Camino, too. It's not just about the walk, as you know. Buen Camino on the rest of your journey away from the Camino.“Walking the Camino is hard but not walking is hard in a different way.” Well said.
After two days of rest, going to hospital for an X-ray to rule out another injury on top of my existing broken toe bone and seeing a fisio yesterday, my foot has not shown improvement.
Although my mind is still battling the situation, my heart knows that it is best to lay down my walking sticks and say goodby for now. I must trust that one day I will be able to return and complete my Camino.
Thank you all for your thoughts.
Amidst my deep disappointment, I feel blessed that I have had this experience. The people and my journey to Burgos will forever remain in my heart.
I sincerely hope the PT can get you on your way. It certainly wouldn't be the first time.I am currently alone in a hotel room feeling very low also.
I made a tough decision this morning when I was preparing for my day’s walk from Tosantos. I began my journey from St Jean with a broken toe (occurred 2 weeks from my departure but I felt I was still to go). I awoke in Grañon (beautiful time at the donativo at San Juan Bautista) with pain in front of my ankle on same foot as broken toe. I hobbled my way to Tosantos thinking it was just a kink I needed to work out of my foot (no pain standing, sitting; only when walking). But this morning there was no improvement. So, I took a taxi into Burgos (my mind was screaming and kicking to pass my two days of walking into Burgos). I have an appt. with a PT tomorrow and the dear young man at my hotel is asking me to seriously think about seeing a doctor before my PT appt.
So many emotions going through me currently…don’t want to give up my heart’s desire of 10 years to walk this journey.
Hoping the PT can get me on my way.
Thank you, this is my exact thought.I sincerely hope the PT can get you on your way. It certainly wouldn't be the first time.
If that doesn't happen (edited to add, unfortunately it looks like it hasn't), don't write off your heart's desire. The Camino has been here for over a thousand years. It isn't going anywhere. It will be waiting for your return. Hold on to your credencial and return to Tosantos (or Burgos) when you can, get another stamp and continue your journey.
I've done exactly this before. No problem at all. I believe lots of people do it across many segments over many years.Can one use the same credencial to continued where one left off even if months/over a year has passed?
Certainly one can. Many Europeans do this who walk the Camino in successive sections. The accepted practice is to get the first stamp when you resume in the last town or village you had stamped when you stopped.Thank you, this is my exact thought.
Can one use the same credencial to continued where one left off even if months/over a year has passed?
Prayers for you, pilgrim xxxx And your toe. You will return. warm regards, Anna“Walking the Camino is hard but not walking is hard in a different way.” Well said.
After two days of rest, going to hospital for an X-ray to rule out another injury on top of my existing broken toe bone and seeing a fisio yesterday, my foot has not shown improvement.
Although my mind is still battling the situation, my heart knows that it is best to lay down my walking sticks and say goodby for now. I must trust that one day I will be able to return and complete my Camino.
Thank you all for your thoughts.
Amidst my deep disappointment, I feel blessed that I have had this experience. The people and my journey to Burgos will forever remain in my heart.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?