Camino de Madman

<p>The Madman's Life</p>

<p>October 22, 2022</p>

<p>I stole a pair of shoes once. Actually, a few times. As I walked the Camino de Santiago.</p>

<p>I can't say I felt any remorse. Because I didn't.</p>

<p>It was a necessity at the time.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I had walked thousands of miles over the years, from country to country. The little I had left had dwindled. Not having soles on the bottom of my feet was a luxury I had grown to like β€” and was unwilling to give up.</p>

<p>I had burned through a few pairs alone as I walked the 900 kilometers of the Camino de Santiago.</p>

<p>Climbing out of bed one morning, looking around the two-hundred-bed dormitory, then down at my worn-out shoes β€” the soles on the bottom flapping as I folded them back with my hands β€” I thought of repairing them with the duct tape I carried with me. But that had dwindled down to nothing, also.</p>

<p>A simple thought. And it was decided.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I had already pondered it the night before as I passed the massive shelf downstairs, loaded with other pilgrims' shoes against the church window.</p>

<p>Churches and parishes have housed the roughly one hundred thousand-plus pilgrims each year that walk the Camino de Santiago. The relatively inexpensive cost to the pilgrims β€” a few dollars each night β€” generates massive revenue for the country. Some of the towns along the way exist and have flourished solely due to the financial influence and popularity of the Camino de Santiago.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>Packing up my things back into my 38-liter Osprey backpack. Slipping my socks on. Silently heading downstairs.</p>

<p>Walking up to the rack loaded with travelers' shoes, I quickly tried on a few pairs before finding a pair big enough for my loppy feet.</p>

<p>I finished lacing them up. Stood up. Stepped out the doors.</p>

<p>One foot in front of the other.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I had left quite early β€” an hour or so before the sun was to rise. The town I had entered the evening before was high in the hills, surrounded by massive pines. A beautiful and refreshing start to my day.</p>

<p>As I left in pitch black down the dark dirt path that led me to my next destination, I was grateful for the air in my lungs. The breathtaking scenery around me. And the soft new soles on my feet.</p>

<p>I thanked God for the life I'd been given. Allowed to live.</p>

<p>Camino de Madman.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I am not ashamed of the man I've become. I've accomplished more in my first forty years on this great earth than most have in a lifetime.</p>

<p>And I'm just getting started.</p>

<p>With thirty countries down out of the 180+ that make up this crazy ass world we all live in, I have so much more to explore.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>As I sit in a Colombian prison β€” a year and a half in on my seven-year sentence β€” I ponder my life decisions.</p>

<p>And then I ponder them some more.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>The Camino de Santiago β€” the Way of St. James β€” is a network of pilgrimages leading to the shrine of the apostle St. James the Great in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela in Galicia, northwestern Spain. For over a thousand years, people have walked this path. For religious reasons. For spiritual reasons. For reasons they cannot explain.</p>

<p>I walked it for the same reason I stole the car. The same reason I picked the locks. The same reason I crossed borders without papers.</p>

<p>Because the path was there. Because my feet needed to move. Because sitting still has never been my gift.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>The shoes I stole probably belonged to a German tourist. Or a Korean. Or a Brazilian. I don't know. I didn't look at the names. I didn't want to know.</p>

<p>I told myself they would buy new ones. That my need was greater. That the Camino provides.</p>

<p>The Camino did provide. It provided me with soles that weren't flapping. With kilometers that didn't hurt. With a path forward when I had nothing else.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I am not a good person. I have never claimed to be.</p>

<p>But I am a person who walks. Who moves. Who refuses to stay in one place for too long β€” even when that place is a prison cell.</p>

<p>In Envigado, I walked in circles. Around the yard. Around the cell. Around my own thoughts.</p>

<p>It is not the same as the Camino. But it is still movement. Still forward. Still one foot in front of the other.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>I wrote this on October 22, 2022. I had been in prison for fifteen months. I had thirty months left at the police station before transfer to Bella Vista. I had no idea when I would walk the Camino again.</p>

<p>But I knew I would.</p>

<p>The path is still there. The churches are still open. The pilgrims are still walking.</p>

<p>And somewhere in Spain, there is a rack of donated shoes waiting for the next person who needs them.</p>

<p>I am not that person anymore. I have soles on my feet now β€” ones I paid for, ones I earned.</p>

<p>But I remember the feeling of stealing those shoes. The guilt that wasn't guilt. The necessity that felt like grace.</p>

<p>β€”</p>

<p>Camino de Madman.</p>

<p>The way of the madman.</p>

<p>Maybe that is the only path worth walking.</p>
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