Call of the Camino Quotes

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Call of the Camino Call of the Camino by Suzanne Redfearn
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Call of the Camino Quotes Showing 1-22 of 22
“Hours of walking in nature does something to a person. Your mind turns off, and your feet march on, and in the vast emptiness, the essence of what it is to be human is revealed.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“You will always be my masterpiece.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Bee venom, he said, is a cure for all sorts of things including inflammation, stress, asthma, and exhaustion—a magic elixir of sorts, so long as you aren’t allergic and it doesn’t kill you.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“walking.” There’s a united sharp intake of air, and”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“As Winnie the Pooh says, ‘How lucky I am to have something that makes saying goodbye so hard.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Regardless of the ambition that puts you on the path, the Camino doesn’t bend to a pilgrim’s will, and the growth experienced by each who walks it is unpredictable.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“There’s something uniquely moving about walking the Camino, humbling and illuminating. Hours of walking in nature does something to a person. Your mind turns off, and your feet march on, and in the vast emptiness, the essence of what it is to be human is revealed.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“more”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“According to the legend, anyone who completes the journey is granted plenary indulgences. Which means your sins are forgiven and any punishment relating to them in this life or eternal life is pardoned.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Every morning we are born again, and it’s what we do today that matters most.’ It’s a Buddhist quote, and I use it to help me forgive my mistakes and move on from them. Maybe it will help you as well.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Before criticizing another person, it is wise to walk a mile in his shoes. That way, if he doesn’t like the criticism, you’re a mile away and wearing his shoes.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“It’s when you stop trying to fight or conquer them yourself that you find peace. You grip a stone tight and let it absorb the sorrow and grief you want to unload, then leave it at his feet. Stones can take it. It’s why they’re so hard.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“for years I’d been saying “someday” I would do it. Sitting there, I realized plainly that none of us really knows how many somedays we have left.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“The purpose of a pilgrimage is to allow time and space away from the familiar, so old ideas and beliefs can fall away and new higher perspectives can arise, and the profoundness of the effect varies.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“in front of a headstone a few meters in, and I read the words engraved on it: 1814 I was once what you are now. You will one day be what I am now.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“I know this is one of those moments, the kind that tattoos your soul and which you never forget.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Buddhist quote he offered earlier. Every morning we are born again, and it’s what we do today that matters most.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery But today is a gift That is why it is called the present. —Bil Keane”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“you can’t live your life based on someone else’s happiness.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“Every morning we are born again, and it’s what we do today that matters most.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino
“peace. You grip a stone tight and let it absorb the sorrow and grief you want to unload, then leave it at his feet. Stones can take it. It’s why they’re so hard.”
Suzanne Redfearn, Call of the Camino