Monday, December 21, 2009

An interview with Leyla Giray, of Women on the Road


Please do go check the interview --- done by Leyla Giray, the publisher of Women on the Road and then have a look at the rest of her site -- it is a fascinating and lovely site that I am sure you will enjoy -- and where you will find some very useful and interesting titbits!

Wilna Wilkinson Travels Solo To Santiago

Many women travel the road to Santiago - known as El Camino - but not all do it alone. And few do it in winter. Wilna Wilkinson is such a woman, and Women on the Road wanted to know more, much more.

Q: Wilna, you walked to Santiago on your own. Why did you choose to do that?

A: Can there be another way to walk a pilgrimage? If it had been a trek or a hike or a walk anywhere else, I can well imagine you would welcome the company. But a pilgrimage is in a sense a walking meditation - in this case an 850 kilometre meditation. To be completely alone for that length of time, to have time and space to think, to reflect, to meditate, is very much a luxury in this busy and demanding world we live in.

If you had the choice of walking alone or walking with a hundred people in your sights in front of you - the next person only ten metres ahead, and a hundred people fast approaching from the back - which would you choose? Think of the litter and the pollution. Think of the number of refuges and beds and having to queue up for shelter and for food. Think of the noise, the crowding, the invasion of your meditation and reflection time and space.

Q: You also did the Camino in winter. Is this to be encouraged?


A: Walking in winter is hard and there is a danger of slippery ice, hypothermia (a very real threat and not uncommon on the Camino), but for me it was no contest. There is extra hardship, but for me the heat and the crowds in summer would have been unbearable. The beauty of the pilgrimage route lies in its remoteness, its inaccessibility, its solitude. That is what makes it possible to think, to meditate, to be yourself without compromise, without any need to conform. None of that would be possible when there are hundreds of thousands of people crowding the pathway.
What advice you'd give a woman contemplating the Camino on her own?

The amazing explorer/mountain climber, Reinhold Messner explains how he managed to climb Mount Everest without any supplemental oxygen: there has to be complete acceptance of whatever will come your way - difficulties, pain, suffering, challenges, demands, physical and mental. Know that you have the resources you need within yourself. Discover those resources within yourself and believe that you will find them. Be ready for an emotional upheaval.

Q: What should a woman walking alone bring with her?


A: In winter, when there are days on end without another person in sight, a mobile phone. Leave it on silent mode so its ringing or vibration don't distract you. Don't let your 'real' life intrude on your pilgrimage, but keep your phone ready in case of emergency.

I didn't take any make-up or creams, but I did want a little luxury - a scrap of old silk, or a scarf, something colourful to sit on or use as a table cloth. A page of poetry, perhaps, something to make you smile. And yes - a couple of immodium (you can't walk with an upset tummy!) and some NOK cream to cover your feet every morning. I walked 850 kilometres and never had one single blister thanks to this excellent preventative measure!

Q: Tell me a little about your book, The Way of Stars and Stones, and why you wrote it...

A: How could I not write about this amazing experience? I dedicated my pilgrimage to a friend with cancer and found that the walk helped me tremendously to understand her pain. I share the many parallels between walking the pilgrimage and suffering from a terminal illness in my book. The Camino provides so many answers on how to cope - it gives insight, understanding - it empowers beyond words. I simply had to share that. And the most heartening thing to hear now is from dozens of people who have cancer and found that the book touched them deeply.

Q: How did the pilgrimage change you and how have you carried that change into your life now?

A: Apart from finally finding my faith, finding the meaning of it all, experiencing the energy from the earth, from creation, from nature? For years I've worked as a motivational speaker and as coach in life skills. I taught people "Don't sweat the small stuff", "If you can dream it you can do it", "The power of the mind", "The power of positive thinking" - all these slogans we live by. But this was the first time I actually lived those slogans and really understood their meaning. For the first time my belief was tested - it is 800km of meditation - you cannot come back unchanged.

Q: Do you http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifreally live in a French chateau?


A: Yes - I really live in a little fairy castle (originally built in 1269) that stands with its feet in the Dordogne river in south-west France. To pay the bills, I run the chateau during the summer as a Chambres d'hote - and love that I can share this most idyllic spot with people from all over the world.

I absolutely love living in countryside after having spent my entire life in big cities, eating only fresh produce grown within a radius of 50 kilometres. It has changed the way I eat, the way I cook. There is time to enjoy life and the world around me, time to be creative.

I coach and speak as far afield as Japan, Iceland, the USA, but I love coming home to my little village by the river!

Q: Where do you want to go next and why?

A: I would love to walk the Camino again - if my feet allow me. I would want to go walk the route of the 88 Buddhist temples of Shikoku in Japan. But that is in the future. For now, my next trip is in a couple of weeks to South Africa where I am going to organise a fairytale wedding for my beautiful daughter, in the bush, under a maroela tree.

***

Wilna Wilkinson's Camino blog is The Way of Stars and Stones, from which all the photographs on this page were borrowed. For a peek at her fairytale castle, read about The View from a Window of a French Chateau.

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Not an uncommon comment!



Interesting how I, too, feel reluctant to read other people's accounts of their caminos. The experience was so intense to me, but reading about another's similar or even different experiences, does not get me easily excited. Yet, every now and then I read another pilgrim's account of their own personal Camino and it grabs me by the heart and the soul, and I read it as if famished.

So, I am not surprised when, every now and then, I come across someone who tells me that they have not read the book as it is not really 'their thing'. Makes sense -- not every book I pick up entices me to sit down and start reading either. But this then is a comment of just such a person -- and it is heartening to read!:

I'm off this week and started reading Wilna's book, almost finished and to my surprise loved it. Even though I am also spritiual rather than religious I just couldn't be excited about someone else's walk of the Camino. Amazed at my enjoyment. It is well written and very gripping, so especially as a sceptic, (me) it makes a good story.DB

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

An important message from the Australian Cancer Research Foundation


To all my friends and Fans on Facebook -- and to all readers of The Way of Stars and Stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage, to all friends and supporters and admirers and fans of the amazing Terrie Baxter, as well as anyone who would like to make a donation to Cancer Research, please note the Following:

When you go online at the Australian Cancer Research Foundation, click on The Stars and Stones Fund to make your donation, and, as Claire McArthur requests below, kindly ensure that the code #REF200 is included in the description field for any deposits so we can identify the funds have come from your fundraiser as opposed to any other deposits we may receive.

Thank you so much for your donations, and for your cooperation!

Buen Camino!

Wilna


Good Morning Wilna,


I have allocated a reference number for your fundraising #REF200.
Can you please ensure that the code #REF200 is included in the description field for any deposits so we can identify the funds have come from your fundraiser as opposed to any other deposits we may receive?

Many thanks and looking forward to hearing from you soon.


Kind Regards,

Claire

Claire McArthur
Australian Cancer Research Foundation
T: 02 9223 7833 F: 02 9223 1800 W

See the latest leukemia breakthrough discovered by our funded researchers at Australian Cancer Research Foundation

Every dollar of every donation received by this Foundation goes to cancer research.

Monday, December 14, 2009


Experience shows that the spirit is nothing but awareness. -- Rumi

Sunrise on a winter's morning on the Camino

Saturday, December 12, 2009

A Reader's message --


"Thanks for the loan of the book. I read it in four sittings from
Saturday through to Monday. I became more engrossed than I originally
thought I would be. Wilna is a good writer but I particularly liked
her musings on people and her connectedness with nature. I plan to buy
a copy to pass on to a friend who went on a pilgrimage last year" -- TB Australia

Thursday, December 10, 2009


A lifetime searching for perfection
is not a wasted life

– Pierre Wilkinson

Pelgrimstog pragtig beskryf Stoffel Cilliers in Volksblad vir Book SA - Reviews



Review in Die Volksblad

THE WAY OF STARS AND STONES. Thoughts on a Pilgrimage. Deur Wilna Wilkinson. Jacana Media. Sagteband. R175.

VOLGENS oorlewering het die apostel Jakobus die evangelie in Spanje verkondig en het Herodes hom in 44 n.C. laat onthoof. Sy oorskot is in die Spaanse stad Santiago de Compostela begrawe (p. 21).

Reeds voor die tiende eeu n.C. het meer as ’n miljoen mense jaarliks die pelgrimspad na Santiago – die Camino – hoofsaaklik om godsdienstige redes geloop, deesdae is dit tot 100 000 pelgrims elke somersdag.

In Mei 2006 ontvang Wilna Wilkinson (57) ’n ontstellende SMS uit Australië: Haar beste vriendin, Terrie, word weens maagkanker geopereer. Dadelik besluit Wilkinson sy gaan die Camino loop: alleen; in die winter; 800 km ver. Só wys Wilkinson vir Terrie sy stry saam met haar teen haar kanker.

Op 10 Februarie 2008 begin haar bedevaart in Frankryk. En Terrie, wat eers “onbehandelbaar” gelyk het, word deur ’n wonderwerk “onverklaarbaar skoon”.

Verskeie hoofstukke, soos die een oor klippe, en ’n ander oor bagasie, is netjies gestruktureerde essays.

Wilkinson vertel goed en beskryf uitstekend. Sy beeld die kosmopolitiese pelgrims met hul eiesoortige dialoog asof op ’n immerbewegende verhoog voor die leser uit. Daar is die mooiste natuurbeskrywings en die interessantste pelgrimslegendes. Rillingwekkend vertel sy hoe sy en Akir, ’n reisgenoot, die duiwel ontmoet het. Dan weer hoe die heilige Jakobus self haar gehelp het.

Dikwels beklemtoon Wilkinson sy het die bedevaart onderneem om ’n “geestelike” rede, nie ’n godsdienstige nie. Eindelik erken sy dat God nie meer vir haar betekenis het nie.
Ná haar bedevaart verwys sy na die natuur as haar “skepper” wat groter is as sy. Met dieselfde verdraagsaamheid waarmee sy al die uiteenlopende beskouinge van haar
medepelgrims bejeën het, neem ’n mens kennis van haar standpunt. Maar tog ook met veel jammerte.

– Stoffel Cilliers, vryskutresensent

- Volksblad

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

A reflection...


The road to paradise is made up of little steps, on a mostly dirt path, with earwigs and moss scattered about, guarded by a few armadillos and the occasional lonely pine, beautified mostly with wild dandelion flowers and dusty moths, within earshot of crickets that have no concept of when they should actually be singing. But hey, we're talking about the road to paradise....

-- from The Universe

Monday, December 7, 2009

A beautiful message from a reader of The Way of Stars and Stones



Hi Wilna and Terrie,

Great excitement as I finished reading "The Way of Stars and Stones" early this morning - what a book - what a journey.

As soon as I received it I wanted to start reading - however - life was busy so I left the reading until November.

Each morning I would eagerly await the light of dawn so I could read another chapter, the Illawarra sun would glisten outside my bedroom window on the flaming red blooms of my Illawarra Flame tree - the first time this tree has burst forth in such glory in 40 years, the red and green King Parrot would be whistling in the trees and the Wattle birds would be calling - I knew it was time to start reading - I wanted to read more - but also I wanted it to be a journey as well - imaging each day as you also woke to each day of your Camino journey.


Wilna I so enjoyed your descriptive passages - that helped to transport me into your world of walking the track, at first I though it would be a physical journey of your 40 days - 850km walk. Then I realised all the side issues and events that come with such a trek, and loved the way you handled the to and fro-ing of your thoughts as well as your physical walk.

As you said " The Ultimate luxury is having the language with which to express yourself" and this you did so well - I felt like I should still be in ITC to give a lexicology session on all your wonderful words! Your selection of quotes for each chapter were so thoughtful and appropriate. My imagination ran riot with so many of your stories - whether they were the ones about the Devil - to how you were going to use your Pepper Spray to protect yourself. Perhaps also because I know you and this adds to my imagination of you in this situation - that at times I laughed out loud, other times my tears came to the surface for you. Do you still have a supply of honey and gunpowder?? How are your feet now - do you have any permanent damage from this amazing walk?

At times I felt like taking a paint brush to paint what you described - "a pale cream stone house with blue shutters, pretty pots with pretty flowers., shiny window panes and whale song spilling out of the open doors."

How did you ever survive that hurricane in Cruz de Ferro? Such a great image created of your feather duster poncho -ripped to shreds by those winds. I am sure if you went of the TV Show "Survivor" you would win the $1,000,000 hands down!

The eeriness of those thick mists - -"shrouding everything in a white cashmere blanket"- the picture you painted "as little dust devils darted mischievously across the fields...". I had some idea of you in a dormitory of 29 male cyclists - as the only time I have done backpacking - the trip from Perth to Darwin in 2007 I had to share a dorm with 4 and one was a male and
I found that confronting - but 29 of them!!!!!!

I so enjoyed your ending and your wonderful photos - which I imagine you have so many of - they will be so precious - of all your days travelling so far. At times I became confused with where your were at - but then your little Camino shell would put me back on track with your story as well.

How great to have such an insight into people and their ways Wilna - I am so pleased that your achievements have helped so many. May Terrie, Thorsten, Kamil & Akira keep that connection going.

I was thrilled when I received your gift ( and yes Terrie - when I can pin you down - I will get the Cancer Foundation donation to you ) and more thrilled to read your story and to participate in a small way in your journey - I still have your Camino emails and marvel at the energy you must have gathered from somewhere to write them as well on that journey of a lifetime.

I am sure my daughter and sisters will enjoy this book as well.

Thanks again Terrie and Wilna

Saturday, December 5, 2009


No messing about with the following words - I Finished your book in the early hours of this morning - what a great read, you have given me the inspiration to walk the Camino and also to walk it alone. Thank you for sharing your many stories. CE, France

Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Why walk alone? Look at the Pilgrim Statistics and tell me if you still wonder!



Many people who have read The Way of Stars and Stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage, write to me to ask what possessed me to walk the Camino in winter and did I not find walking alone very lonely. To a large degree I answer the first question in the book -- it is very much a personal choice and not everyone is as fortunate as I was to have the luxury of time and choice of dates as I had, and the answer to the second question is a categoric "NO!" Most people find it a frightening thought to be on their own -- especially for such a long period and in such a vast and uninhabited space. But think about it -- if you had the choice of walking alone or walking with a hundred people in your sights in front of you -- the next person only ten metres ahead, and a hundred people fast approaching from the back -- the next person only ten metres behind you, which would you choose? Think of the litter and the pollution. Think of the number of refuges and beds and having to queue up for shelter and for food. Think of the noise, the crowding, the invasion of your mediation and reflection time and space.

The number of pilgrims collecting a compostela in Santiago during 2007 (last year's statistics aren’t yet available) was 114,026 from 138 different nations.
The most popular route continues to be the Camino Francés, playing host to 91,872 pilgrims representing 80% (down from 92% 2 years ago).
The second most popular route to Santiago is now the Camino Portugués with 8,110 pilgrims representing 7%. While not in these statistics the Camino Finisterre is becoming increasingly popular with an estimated 12,500 collecting a Fisteranna in 2008.
Next year, 2010 is a Holy Year on the Camino (there will not be another Holy Year until 2021.) and it now looks increasingly likely that Pope Benedict XVI will visit Santiago de Compostela during the year -- probably at the end of July when the Day of St James, 25 July, falls on a Sunday. Accordingly the number of visitors to Santiago during that year could rise to 10 million with 1⁄4 million expected to arrive on foot.

< A pilgrimage route in summer vs a pilgrimage route in winter? >






(Flights: From November 2008 Ryanair opened 2 daily flights from Santiago to Madrid to supplement its flights from/to Barcelona, Frankfurt, Rome and London. This has forced other airlines such as Iberia to lower its fares on this increasingly popular route to Madrid. Aer Lingus will fly twice weekly (Tues/Sat) direct from Dublin to Santiago from May 2nd to September 19th 2009.)


My barn having burned down, I can now see the moon
-- Leo Buscaglia


Sunday, November 29, 2009

Le livre sur amazon en France!



Pour tous mes amis francais --mon Livre The Way of Stars and Stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage est bien disponible sur -- amazon.fr a un prix fou! Rappelez-vous que tout le produit de la vente de ce livre sera pour la recherche contre le cancer!

Saturday, November 28, 2009


Do not follow in the footsteps of the old masters, but seek what they sought. Achieve enlightenment, then return to this world of ordinary humanity. - Basho

page 187, The Way of Stars and Stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage

Thursday, November 26, 2009

Two reviews on amazon.com


Kimberley Lovato (Brussels, Belgium)
Unlike the zillions of 'how to' books about walking the Camino de Santiago de Compostela, this book is a personal journey about a woman who chose to do something challenging when her best friend was stricken with cancer. Along the way , she gets to know others, and herself, on a compelling journey. She does a great job weaving characters in and out through her tales, all the while, never letting the reader forget what is at the heart of this tremendous journey. It was a humbling pleasure to walk with her.

Morton B. Walley "book fan", Roberta Walley (USA)
Ms. Wikinson's book opened a new world for me. I enjoyed reading about her journey , both internal and external, walking over the Pyrenees mountains in winter. She was seeking to understand her friend's fight with cancer and feel some of the challenges of the ordeal through her 850 km. walk to Santiago de Compostela. The author travels a difficult path. This a a journey of discovery for all who read this wonderful book.


Have you read the book yet? Why not go to amazon yourself and contribute a review of the book? Remember, every book sold is a contribution to the Stars and Stones Fund at the Australian Cancer Foundation!

More readers' reviews




Thank you so much for letting us take a look into your experiences on the Camino. I have just finished your book and handed it to my husband. And my recommendation is: read your book at least twice. I do so appreciate the fact that you are so open in sharing your thoughts, experiences and feelings you had and those of your fellow pilgrims.
You are a great writer and story teller.-- SM, The Netherlands




I have just finished reading your book - I cried, laughed, wondered and agonized with you over the whole 800 kms. It was not only a gift to Terrie, it was also a gift to me. The whole time I was reading it I felt like I was sitting in your little upstairs sitting room at La Linde and you were telling me your stories over a glass of rioja. I could hear your voice, and your laugh, and your exasperation and your joy. Thank you so much for sharing it with us.-- LS, Canada



I really enjoyed the book presentation, and I am also very enthusiastic about it as I read on and on. I understand so much of your thoughts, your solitude, as I live them myself. My "Camino" is certainly not as physically tough as yours, but I feel there is a similarity. -- MS, Film producer



Ek skryf in Afrikaans, want ek lei af dit is jou moedertaal. Sien jy was de Villiers. Ek is 'n Stellenbosch-er (so effe jonger as jy) en ons bly hier in ons eie stukkie paradys onder die skadu van die Pieke.
Verlede week sommer so onbeplan in 'n klein boekwinkel, weggesteek in Dorpstraat ingeglip en vra vir die vrou of sy iets het oor die Camino. "Hier het sopas 'n pragtige boek verskyn" sê sy. Ek is vrolik met jou boek onder my arm weg. Watter absolute vreugde was jou boek om te lees. Ek het vanmiddag, na die gaste hier weg is, gou die laaste hoofstukke gelees. Veels geluk met pragtige skryfwerk. Jou boek lees so lekker, maklik en die inhoud wissel en bly boeiend interessant. Dit was 'n vreugde om saam met jou en die ander pelgrims te kon stap. Ek het so op 'n manier swaar van jou boek (en die karakters) afskeid geneem en het net die behoefte om vir jou te sê "well done!" Ek het van jou fotos op die internet verder gekyk en dit is PRAGTIG. Jammer dit kon nie meer tot reg in die boek gekom het nie, maar die swart en wit hou ook sy eie mistiek in.
Ek gaan dit volgende jaar in Junie Julie stap. Dit was so lekker om 'n resente boek te kry en ek dink dat dit 'n groot voordeel is om dit in die winter te stap- naas die koue!! Ek weet ons gaan oorval word met getalle volgende jaar in die heilige jaar, maar sal dit as 'n pelgrimstog van 'n ander toonaard hanteer.
Nogmaals dank vir 'n pragtige boek.
-- DH, SA



I finished reading your book on the weekend. I enjoyed it very much and found it very inspirational. My only gripe: the fact that you didn’t tell us how you finally managed to get back on your seriously messed up feet after the treatment by the osteopath; how long it took; and what the ‘gunpowder’ was! -- LH, SA



I have just this very minute finished reading your book from cover to cover. I have enjoyed it immensely could not put it down! Let me tell you, I am not a reader, can’t remember when last I actually completely read a book. I am sooooooooooo in awe of what you accomplished!
I FEEL AS THOUGH I TOO HAVE WALKED THE CAMINO – THROUGH YOUR EYES AND THANK GOODNESS ON YOUR FEET AND NOT MINE!
I am useless with words, but in my own way I want to tell you I have learnt and realised so much through your experiences, lots of food for thought. How you did it, under all those harrowing circumstances, I do not know. I didn’t know you could actually walk it the ‘rich & lazy’ way I thought you COULD only do it the Pilgrim’s way, so you have enlightened me about that too.
I’m, as I said not great with words, but I think I’ve got to know you, learnt more about you, just through reading your book.
I TAKE MY HAT OFF TO YOU!!!!!
-- JD, SA

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Excerpt from The Way of Stars and Stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage


I definitely wasn’t looking for a religious experience. My spiritual quest was to experience a level of commitment to something so great, so important, that any fear, inhibition or shame faded in significance. I wanted to pledge myself to something that would take me out of myself and place me on a level far beyond my ken. I wanted to be transported to a spiritual plane where the pettiness and detail of a mundane life had no import and where the true sense of life, love, friendship and courage would become clear.

In my frequent travels across the globe, I have always envied the faithful their blind resolve in the face of a staring world – be it the believers who, in airports, stop off in a side room to kneel down towards Mecca; or the orthodox Jew, with his prayer shawl draped over his shoulders, standing by the porthole of the plane door, rocking his silent prayer to his God; or the New Ager standing naked in the field, arms outstretched, greeting the ever-reliable sun at dawn. In Japan I’ve looked with longing at the white-clad funny-hatted men and women who walk the route of the 88
Buddhist temples of Shikoku. Even in Memphis, in the United States, it was not with scorn or ridicule that I watched the long lines of people who patiently and silently inched their way forward to the open doors of Elvis Presley’s home, Graceland; I watched with something approaching awe and admiration. And then, of course, I have been deeply moved by the thousands of pilgrims who cycle, walk or ride on horseback on their way to Santiago de Compostela in Spain.

Now, subconsciously, I sensed that this altered state of being I was yearning for was exactly what I’d seen in the faces of pilgrims at the airport, in the lines at Graceland – and on the Way of St James.

I did not need drugs, or alcohol, or an evangelist preacher to take me to that level. What I did need was total commitment – something I realised even before I started to research the requirements and demands of such a pilgrimage. This was not something I could do on a whim. It wouldn’t count that I had often taken on exciting challenges and demanding adventures on no more than a sudden impulse, nor that I’d always achieved what I set out to do, sometimes courtesy of pure good fortune. But, without total commitment even I could quite possibly fail. This time, this challenge was to demand more than ever before.
-Page 4-5

More Comments about the book



J'ai apprécié grandement la parole naturelle et sincère de Wilna vendredi dernier. Nous étions sur le chemin en sa compagnie. Que de rencontres insolites!.
-Jeanne Vigouroux



Wilna's descriptions of her experiences and finding the resources she needed on her journey, could have been the writing of someone, like myself, who is fighting the fight against cancer. Without spelling it out each time there is a distinct parallel between the Camino and cancer, anyone who has been on that journey themselves or anyone who is near someone who has or had this dreaded disease, will be heartened and inspired by The Way of Stars and Stones. There is so much in the book to reflect upon that you know you will always keep it close to refer back to time and time again. -Caroline T.



The Way of Stars and Stones by Wilna Wilkinson is a book I like tohave near me.
Wilna's story of her pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela touched a deep chord within me and had a profound effect upon me. Her courage, philosophy and basic common sense gave me an insight into myself.
I am recuperating from cancer and now see my recovery as 'my Camino'. It has helped me come to terms with myself and to accept things as they are and to count my blessings.
To sum up, all I can say is Thank you Wilna, you have given my life a new purpose.

-Avril H.





Tuesday, November 24, 2009

The passing days and months are eternal travellers in time...

The years that come and go are travellers too. Life itself is a journey.

--Matsuo Basho (from: The Way of Stars and Stones, page 120)

Thursday, November 19, 2009

One step at a time is good walking -- Chinese proverb.



Page 92 -- The Way of stars and stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage

“Pilgrimage into the Heart: The Inner Teachings of El Camino de las Estrellas”



A member of the Confraternity of St James sent me this link. For anyone who has read the book, or anyone who has ever wanted to go on a pilgrimage, or has a need to find the lost spirituality in their lives, but may not have the courage to embark on such a journey alone, this seems to be a wonderful opportunity. Have a look!
An exceptional Pilgrimage in 2010

15 day practical exploration of the Spiritual Master Builders’ meditation and energetic practices,
along Saint James’ Way, the Cosmic River on Earth

With Ferran Blasco Aguasca (Enzo)

May 21st – June 4th, 2010

(Only 12 spaces)




PRESENTATION

El Camino de Santiago (Saint James Way) is one of the oldest spiritual pilgrimages existing in the world today. The trail, about 850 miles of spectacular beauty across northern Spain, from the Pyrenees, on the Mediterranean coast, to Saint James tomb in Galicia and further on to the Atlantic Coast, was recognized by our ancestors as a path of profound spiritual significance.

They understood this path as a Cosmic River on Earth, having a double dimension: the path on the Earth, later known as El Camino de Santiago, and the path in the Heavens, the Milky Way. That union of the Earthly and Cosmic energies offered to them the space for entering in communion with the spiritual realms.

Since ancient times, pilgrims from all over the world have come to El Camino to experience its hundreds of magical and powerful sites. Its history is linked to the legends of the megalithic builders, the Celtic druids, the Holy Grail, Noah’s journey and especially to the worship of the Great Goddess – Mother Earth.


PURPOSE OF THE JOURNE
Y

The purpose of this exceptional 15-day journey is to connect with that millennial tradition of spiritual masters that achieved a deep understanding of life and its universal laws along El Camino. This will be done through an in-depth practical study of the personal significance of El Camino from the point of view of the pilgrim, the master builder and, especially, the spiritual seeker. Our approach will blend nature, temple visits, meditation and energetic practices, with sacred geometry and geomancy.

STEPPING OFF THE BEATEN PATH

While still visiting quite a few of the more commonly know sites of the modern pilgrimage, our journey will step off the beaten path to explore areas nowadays omitted or unknown to most pilgrims and most guidebooks.

The journey will takes us about 2300 kilometers (1400 miles) along the whole length of one of the most ancient routes of the original pilgrimage: from the Mediterranean coast, just south of Barcelona, to Finisterre, on the Atlantic Coast.

The “stepping off the beaten path” will be both in terms of physical external landscape and personal internal landscape. Through the practice of meditation we will aim at looking for new references of what pilgrimage means as a practice for personal evolution.


DAILY ACTIVITIES AND TEACHINGS

Our days will open with early morning star meditation and qi gong (gentle exercise) practices just before sunrise. After practice, breakfast will follow, usually at the hotel or Bed and Breakfast where we slept.

The rest of the day will depend on where we are, but will include:
- Daily hikes chosen for their beauty and significance. Average length 2 hours, some up to 6 hours. Different degrees of difficulty.
- Practical study of the foundations of pilgrimage as a spiritual practice.
- Lectures and presentations about the Camino´s history, sacred geometry, art and symbolism.
- Study of key stars and constellations for El Camino de las Estrellas (the Trail of the Stars) along with meditation practices related to them.
- Visits to the key sites along the trail for study and practices.
- Qi Gong (gentle exercise) and meditation practices.
- Medieval mandala and temple floor plans study.
- Free time for reflection and personal sightseeing.
All activities are optional. If you are tired or need time by yourself, you may of course stay at the hotel.

ITINERARY
This is a brief summary of the pilgrimage itinerary and some of the key sites we will visit. It´s subject to changes but it will give you a general idea:
May 21: Sitges – Montserrat (visits to Our Lady del Vinyet Sanctuary, Montserrat Holy Cave and Benedictine Monastery to meet the Black Madonna).
May 22: Montserrat – Siresa (5 hour drive with stops for sightseeing).
May 23: Siresa (Hike to Roman Trail and Puerto del Palo, most ancient way to cross the Pyrenees for pilgrims).
May 24: Siresa (Hike to Agüas Tuertas Valley – megalithic sites. Visit to San Pedro de Siresa church).
May 25: Siresa – Leyre (Visit to La Virgen de la Peña’s hermitage, Santa Cilia, San Juan de la Peña, Santa Cruz de la Serós. Gregorian Chants in Leyre).
May 26: Leyre – San Millán de la Cogolla (Visits to Santa Maria de Eunate and Puente la Reina).
May 27: San Millán de la Cogolla (3 hour hike to San Millan´s holy hermitage and Suso´s monastery).
May 28: San Millán de la Cogolla (Teachings at hotel and relaxed day).
May 29: San Millán de la Cogolla – León (Visit to Sierra de la Demanda área. 3 hour hike).
May 30: León – Barbadelo (Visit to Leon´s cathedral, Villafranca del Bierzo and O´Cebreiro).
May 31: Barbadelo (Teachings at hotel).
June 1: Barbadelo – Santiago (Visit to Santiago´s cathedral).
June 2: Santiago – Fisterra (Visit to Santiago´s cathedral).
June 3: Fisterra (Lires – Muxia walk. Visit to Santuario de la Virgen de la Barca).
June 4: Fisterra – Santiago (End pilgrimage).


WHAT IS DIFFERENT THIS YEAR FROM OTHER YEARS?

The purpose of the 2010 pilgrimage is to dedicate more time to explore and practice Inner Teachings of El Camino through the energetic and meditation practices.
Pilgrimage is a retreat in motion, so the focus will be on utilizing our time to deepen into ourselves through practice. For this reason there will be more periods of formal meditation. A sequence of practices will be presented to undertake the “Pilgrimage into the Heart”. We will explore the seven gates of Consciousness that are present in El Camino and see how they connect our personal life to the “One Life”.

We will also spend more time walking. This year´s pilgrimage will incorporate some more and longer walks.
For these two purposes, instead of spending mostly each night at a different hotel, as we did before, we will stay 2-3 nights average per site, allowing for a more settled rhythm.
TRANSPORTATION AND LANDSCAPE

The journey will offer an in-depth view of the Spanish landscape. Along our trip we will cross several main areas: the Mediterranean coast, the powerful Pyrenees, the Castilian plains, the magical forests of Galicia and the Atlantic coast.
We will visit some major cities but mostly little villages and areas where the ancient flavor of the pilgrimage is still very present.
We will drive two comfortable minivans. This will offer us the opportunity to visit some truly exceptional sites that are off the regular Camino and that most walking pilgrims can’t visit because of obvious time and distance concerns.

The daily drive from site to site will be only between 1 to 2 hours with stops to visit sites and do practices along the way.

GROUP

Due to the structure of the class and the nature of the teachings, only 12 spaces are available.
The objective of having such a compact group is to allow more personal attention to each individual and to be able to move with more ease and fun.
The intention is to have a small, easygoing group that wants to focus on spending time doing practices and learning about the areas’ rich spiritual heritage in a fun and relaxed way but focused on the task ahead.
MINIMUM SIZE FOR THE GROUP
The minimum number of people for the pilgrimage to take place is 6 persons.
In the unlikely event that the number is not reached 12 weeks before departure, we will contact you to consider different possibilities.
PREPARING FOR THE JOURNEY

The practice of pilgrimage, and therefore the intention of this class, is not simply traveling from place to place to look around and take some pictures. It is a most important step in personal development in which one brings to completion situations unfinished from the past, closing cycles and recovering energetic integrity.

Pilgrimage starts long before one arrives at the “place of departure”. For this reason, some preparatory practices will be suggested to participants in the months prior to arriving to Spain for the actual trip.

After making your reservation you will receive instructions on the practice and a list with suggested reading to help you to prepare for the journey.

STARTING AND FINISHING DATES AND PLACES
Class starts: Friday May 21st @ 7 am in Sitges (Barcelona) (Airport code: BCN)
Class ends: Friday June 4th @ 5 pm in Santiago de Compostela

HOTELS AND ACCOMMODATIONS

All accommodations will be very comfortable, nice and clean, mostly in really beautiful rural settings. The price is for double rooms with a private bathroom.

Some single rooms are available for most nights if previously arranged (extra fee of 320 euros), but due to the nature of the places we will stay the number is limited.

HOW SOME PARTICIPANTS FELT ABOUT PREVIOUS
PILGRIMAGES

“It’s been a life changing experience.” Karin Sorvik, NY, USA
“An amazing journey… Some of the most beautiful and inspiring landscapes I have ever seen. Thank you Ferran!” David Powell, CO USA
“A journey of a lifetime.” Caryn Boyd-Diel, NM, USA
“The trip provided more than I could have imagined. I would go again without hesitation.” Onja, NC, USA
“My fellow peregrinos were incredible and contributed wholeheartedly to the overall experience.” Thom Herbst, MI, USA

COST: 2430 EUROS.

Included:

- 14 hotel nights in double occupancy bedrooms with private bathroom.
- Tuition for 15 days of classes and practices.
- Transportation in 2 minivans from Barcelona to Santiago Compostela.
- Breakfasts and one meal per day for 14 days (either lunch or dinner).
- Entrances to sites that require a fee for group visits.
- Basic insurance provided by the car rental company on van passengers.
Not included:
- Airfare to Spain and back to your destination.
- Transportation back from Santiago to your destination within Spain after the class.
- Hotels for the night of May 20th in Sitges and June 4th in Santiago. Recommendations will be provided).
- Medical insurance.
- Tips at hotels and restaurants.
- Everything else that is not included in the “Includes” section.



PAYMENTS

Due to the constantly changing exchange-rate for the dollar – euro, it is suggested to pay in full as soon as possible.
By credit card: Visa or Mastercard accepted.
By wire transfer: bank account in Spain information upon request. Bank fees are to be payed by the sender.
Payment plan option is available: (1% added to each payment made by credit card when using paying plan)
- Reservation fee: 820 euros (non-refundable).
- Then 2 payments of 805 euros due by January 15th and march 31st.
For payment plan option, payment will be scheduled and charged on the due date to the credit card number provided.

REFUND POLICY
If after you reserve your space you need to cancel your participation in the class, this is the policy:
Reservation fee is Non-Refundable.
Before March 1st: we will refund credit card or wire money back to you for the amount you have paid until then, minus bank fees for transaction and non-refundable reservation fee.
After March 1st: No refunds. There´s the possibility though that another person you know might come in your place, if they are fit for the journey.

In the very unlike case that we have to cancel the journey from our reasons in our end or because there were not enough participants, never happened yet, you would receive a full refund for any amount you have pain, including the reservation fee.

REGISTER

There are only 12 spaces. Contact us to by email or phone us if you have any questions or to arrange payment. Lots of happy references from previous “pilgrims” upon request.
A minimum of 6 reservations has to be received by January 15th or we will contact you to consider other retreat possibilities.
We´ll be very happy to talk with you about any question you might have.

CONTACT INFORMATION

Shen Dao Institute of Acupuncture and Natural Health
Ferran Blasco Aguasca (Enzo)
Tel. 00 34 93 292 01 06 – Cel. 00 34 650 576 107
Fax. 00 34 93 691 98 57
Mailing Address: Calle Balmes, 151 Ent 1 – BCN 08008
Email: ferran@acupunturabarcelona.com
Web: www.zahoriart.com – www.acupunturabarcelona.com

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

More comments!


from Silvia Nilsen, Confraternity of St James : I've spoken to two people who heard your interview on SAFM. One is a pilgrim recently returned from the camino Frances who said that she felt so nostalgic listening to you talk that she just wanted to go back to Spain.
Then last night I gave a talk on the camino to the Rotary Club at Mt Edgecombe and a woman in the audience was particularly animated. Afterwards she told me that she had heard an interview with a woman on SAFM and was so inspired that she decided there and then that she had to walk the camino. And then, she came along to the Rotary meeting to find me giving a talk about el camino. "Its a sign!" she said. "I'd never heard of it before and now twice in one week I hear two different women talking about it." So, she is planning to walk in 2011

Monday, November 9, 2009

Lancement du livre de Wilna Wilkinson at Aquitaine Langues, hosted by Albert Croce



Lancement du livre de Wilna Wilkinson

Vendredi 20 novembre 2009 à 19h00, Centre Aquitaine Langues
« The Way of Stars and Stones »
Conférence dialoguée


Le Centre Aquitaine Langues et Albert CROCE sont heureux de vous recevoir
Au Centre Aquitaine Langues, à Bergerac, pour une conférence dialoguée sur le lancement du livre de Wilna Wilkinson « The Ways of Stars and Stones » qui retrace ses rencontres et ses réflexions sur le chemin de Saint Jacques de Compostelle.

La conférence sera suivie d’un buffet « Wine and Cheese »
Vin offert pour l’occasion par Gerrita Thiart-Martin de ViniSource

« Cuvée Compostelle » du Château Côte Monpezat, Côtes de Castillon 2005

Prière de réserver à l’avance Entrée 6€



Wednesday, October 28, 2009

An excerpt from The Way of Stars and Stones - Thoughts on a pilgrimage



That night, in Calzadilla de la Cueza, a village with a name longer than its main street, I sat alone in front of the monitor, tucked away in a dark back corner of the room, trying to get to grips with a keyboard with only blank keys – the letters having been completely worn away by the fingertips of thousands of pilgrims who had preceded me. As I looked down in exasperation at this tired and worn keyboard, I suddenly had a wave of recognition wash over me. I felt the presence of all those pilgrims who’d sat where I was sitting; who had tried to have their fingers remember which keys represented the letters they needed to write a message home to loved ones – to tell them they were still safe on their pilgrimage. I could
almost hear them cursing under their breath when they typed and the wrong letters came up, turning their messages into gobbledegook. I could almost feel their breath on my back as they paced the floor waiting for me to finish so they could have their turn. I could almost see their smiles as the screen lit up and they found messages in their inbox from someone back home telling them that they were missed. In that moment of solitude, I felt utterly and wholly part of this confraternity of the Camino. At the same time, I was aware that this feeling had slowly been creeping up on me for a long time. In fact, it was a feeling that had started to manifest itself on that very first night in Roncesvalles when I shared a beer with Thorsten and Akira and we spoke late into the night – about why we were on the Camino, about our fears and hopes and expectations.

It was over that first meal from the pilgrim’s menu, bought for the princely sum of eight euros – a delicious and nourishing broad bean and potato soup, a huge plate of tender veal stew and a large glass of ice-cold, frothy beer – that we quickly recognised in each other fellow-pilgrims.

Perhaps it was that the three of us were starting our pilgrimage from the same place and at the same time. There was definitely something special about the bond formed between we strangers who had embarked on a journey together. Or perhaps it was that we’d been brought together by a common purpose. As individuals, we were different in every way – age, background, culture and language – yet we sensed subconsciously that
where one lacked, another might be able to compensate. Each individual’s assets and characteristics complemented those of the others – a type of a synergy where the combined whole of our little band was far, far greater than the sum of the individuals.

In his book on the Camino, Coelho speaks of being more accessible to others around you on the journey because instinctively you know that they may be able to help you in difficult situations. The Camino was in many ways a survival course: you had to dig deep to find the resources within yourself in order to get through each day. It was astonishing to find resources you’d never been aware of, but it was also frightening when a needed resource was simply not there, no matter how deep you dug. And it was then that you came to appreciate the other pilgrims around you.
Everyone has talent. Sometimes we only discover that talent late in life, but the talent is there for the finding. And the Camino was the perfect place for the ‘big reveal’ of those hidden talents. If I could find resources within myself that I’d never known I had, so could every other pilgrim. And it was the pooling of those resources that created the bond among pilgrims. Not only did each have the wondrous pleasure of discovering their own latent potential, but each also had the unrivalled pleasure of being with other people who had a need for their particular talent.

Later I learned that for many pilgrims this was the one special aspect of their Camino – the remarkable goodwill, generosity and voluntary interdependence among pilgrims. I frequently heard pilgrims talk about this wonderful phenomenon of the Camino. It could be something that a fellow-pilgrim had offered in the form of advice or spiritual guidance, clothing or toiletries, water or food. Often the biggest source of surprise was the fact that the generosity came from someone who ‘wasn’t even a Christian’. There seems to be an unspoken assumption that someone who
walks the pilgrimage has to have some degree of religious motivation, and the expectation is that, to show kindness, their religion must be Christian. Whenever this subject came up in conversation, I was astounded at people’s preconceived ideas about other religions, because almost every time an act of random kindness surprised a pilgrim, it came from a non-Christian. My only surprise was that those who offered assistance seldom realised that what they were really offering was not necessarily something tangible or material, but something of themselves. They were releasing a small piece of their own spirit into the universe, and the universe was the richer for it.

I have always believed that ‘what goes around, comes around’. My smile, my positive attitude, my helpfulness, my generosity of time and energy almost unfailingly generate a similar response from people around me – friends and strangers alike. The payback may not happen immediately, and perhaps it will come from someone completely different, but people’s actions and behaviour towards you are often a reflection of what you transmit. And yet many pilgrims seemed to find this to be the most amazing thing about their pilgrimage, because they’d obviously not come across this side of the human spirit very often before. How incredibly sad that people should be surprised at the random kindness of others; but how incredibly wonderful that they make this discovery on the Camino. For this seemed to be the way of the Camino – bringing the spirit of people together from all ends of the planet, all walks of life, all faiths and creeds, but with a single goal, to walk ‘the Way under the Stars’.

Whatever it was that acted as the glue binding us together, my little ‘Camino family’ was formed that night: Thorsten, a 24-year-old university student from Cologne; Akira, a 38-year-old gay musical theatre actor from Japan; and me, a 57-year-old Eurocentric African woman from France. And even on that first night we knew the bond between us was stronger than most people experience among their blood relatives. ‘You two are my Camino family,’ Akira said many times during the
following three weeks. ‘You are my Camino mother and Thorsten is my Camino father.’ That Akira was years older than Thorsten, whom he called his ‘father’, and was possibly not quite young enough to my ‘son’ was neither here nor there. For once, age was not the issue, and for me this was wonderfully refreshing. The three of us – without having to say anything about it – felt that a close bond had been forged that night, and for all of us the bond was to prove very important over the next few weeks.

Sunday, October 25, 2009

Where can you buy the book?



If you are in South Africa, the book should be in stock at the following bookshops (but if not, or you wish to go to your nearest shop which may not be on this list, please place an order for the book -- and so help in the distribution and sales of the book!)
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The book may also be ordered online from the following sites:

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And if you so wish, the book may be ordered from me : send you name and postal address to twoxscotch@gmail.com

Remember -- all proceeds go to Cancer Research, so every book bought is a donation to a very good cause!