The Way leaves La Isla by dirt road leading to the villages
of Bueno and Colvian to Colunga, up the hill to Cabonota to our final
destination of Priesca where we visit the church of San Salvador, in the
Principality of Asturia, a10th century chapel buil by Alfonso III.
We started the day inspired by some words from Parker J.
Palmer, in his book, “Let Your Life Speak.”
“Most of us arrive at a sense of self and vocation only
after a long journey through alien lands. But this journey bears no resemblance
to the trouble-free “travel packages” sold by the tourism industry. It is more
akin to the ancient tradition of pilgrimage – “a transformative journey to a
sacred center” full of hardships, darkness and peril.
In the tradition of pilgrimage, those hardships seem not as
accidental but as integral to the journey itself. Treacherous terrain, bad
weather, taking a fall, getting lost – challenges of that sort, largely beyond
our control, can strip the ego of the illusion that it is in charge and make
space for the true self to emerge. If that happens, the pilgrim has a better
chance to find the sacred center he or she seeks. Disabused of our illusions by
much travel and travail, we awaken one day to find that the sacred center is
here and now – in every moment of the journey, everywhere in the world around
us, and deep within our our hearts.”
I elected today to opt out of the “cliff hanger” segment of
The Camino. It is a steep climb up a cliff which follows the ocean. The path is
reportedly only approximately 12-15 feet wide in places, only 2-3 feet wide in
others, with no fence or guide rope between you and the cliff and the ocean.
Oh, and there are people on bikes who claim first right to the path, so you
have to step back and cling to the cliff as they go by.
Sure. Like that would really happen for me.
So, I decided that I have been on lots of cliffs in my life
– both physical and metaphorical – and I will most likely be on another one
before I take my leave, but not today.
No, not today.
So, I walked around the little village of Bueno, standing
eye-to-eye with cows and horses, talking with people who lived there, me in my
broken Spanglish and they in there’s.
I met a wonderful old man who simply assumed that I
understood him – and I did, mostly – who wanted to tell me about this shrine in
the middle of two trees.
He said that the chestnut tree was many, many centuries old
but, after the Spanish Revolutionary War, it had been hit by mortar and began
to die. Someone in the village decided to take a piece of wood from it and
helped it begin to root. The miracle is that, in the midst of the war, the
shoot did take root and another tree began to grow next to the old dying tree.
Another miracle happened when the original tree, from which
the shoot had been taken, saw the new tree growing, it, too, began to get
healthy. And now, there are two beautiful chestnut trees in the center of town,
with a wee little stone shrine to San Sebastian in the middle of them.
As near as I could understand the old man, who had a
delightful way of winking at me as he tapped his forearm against my forearm for
emphasis, said that it was “the blood of the martyrs that watered that tree,
giving it life and hope for the future.”
I did get the punctuation to his story when he said, “There
will always be Spain! Always. Always. Always.”
And, he blessed himself three times, the way Spanish people
do, even if they are not Catholic. First, a cross on the forehead. Then, a
cross on the lips. Then, a cross over the heart, And, finally – big finish – a Big
Cross, sweeping broadly from head to navel and then, shoulder to shoulder.
“Buen Camino!” he said, “Your path is this way, but all the
roads to the Camino lead to your soul,” he said.
“ . . . . the sacred center is here and now – in every
moment of the journey, everywhere in the world around us, and deep within our
our hearts.” (Parker Palmer)
Amen.
Thank you all for joining me on this Camino.
I feel your presence and your prayers and your support.
It means the world to me.
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