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What is Pilgrimage?
Testimonials:
Ireland
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About Mara Freeman
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A pilgrimage is a prayer in the
shape of a journey to a place where spirit resides.
Mara Freeman
One way to fully experience the sacredness of the universe is to become a pilgrim. Since the dawn of time, people have sought out
places of divine revelation in the landscape: on holy mountains, by curative springs, at
oracular caverns and the shrines of saints
Ancient Highways
In the sea-bound lands of northwest Europe, pilgrimage has been a deep-rooted part
of the collective psyche for thousands of years. Although
written records begin only with the journeys of monks in the Middle Ages, the landscape
has another, older tale to tell. One of the most ancient roads in Europe is the Ridgeway,
which runs for eighty-five miles across
the chalk downland of southern England. From at least 5,000 years ago, it led pilgrims
westward from the Thames Valley to the great megalithic temple complex of Avebury, West
Kennet and Silbury Hill. Throughout the years, pilgrims have passed by and wondered at the
sacred markers of different ages that can still be seen today: burial tumps,
the stone chamber of Wayland’s Smithy, and the mysterious White Horse carved
into the chalk,
galloping forever over the downs
Blue Remembered Hills
What blessed island do we hope to reach when we set out on pilgrimage? Will it be a
place where we will find healing, clarity, inspiration, or perhaps a whole new perspective
on life?
And will we be able to
recognize it when the shoreline comes into view? An ordinary journey as tourist or
traveler leaves one unchanged, but pilgrimage is a journey of the soul as well as the body
and changes one forever. We leave familiar surroundings behind, not only to discover a
special place, but to discover the part of ourselves that seems to have wandered away from
our everyday lives. Stripped of our usual context, we travel to find out who we are in
relation to sea, sky and stone. As pilgrims, we move through an inner as well as an outer
landscape, seeking the blue remembered hills of our souls home.
Into the Mystic
Pilgrimage to sacred sites, whether to a distant land or to a hill you can see from
your window at home, takes us from the outside to the inside. It also involves
an element of trust, that the journey will be worthwhile and not put us in harms
way. The word pilgrim derives from the Latin peregrinus, one who
travels through the land. In the Middle Ages, wandering monks called perigrini
left their homelands and cast themselves on the mercy of the waves in tiny
coracles to do the work of God in unknown lands. Although they were
ostensibly driven by the promise of a reward in the afterlife, they surely
must have been fired by the tremendous exhilaration that comes with leaving
the safety of the known world for adventures in strange lands, where they
had no material resources, no shelter, no food, and could not even speak the
language. When we voluntarily loosen the reins with which we control our
everyday lives, we are thrust into the present where at once we become more
vibrant, more alive. With each breath, we sip the cup of life and surrender
to the intoxication of the universe as it unfolds each moment.

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Seven pointers towards making a sacred journey

1. Pack lightly the essence of pilgrimage is to find out who we are outside
the cocoon of our familiar milieu, so dont try to bring it along with you!
2. Take comfortable
clothing and shoes you will only get to know the land by walking on it, and many
sacred places tend to be off the beaten track.
3. Be prepared to get dirt
in your sandals we are a society addicted to a lifestyle that promises to make us
feel clean, safe, and protected from the environment, rather than free and open to explore
it.
4. Less is more if
you try to pack in too many places to visit, you will spend precious time on the road
especially in countries where poor or narrow roads make distances deceptive. We can
end up replicating our frenetic lives back home and return with spiritual indigestion,
rather than feeling nourished. Choose two or three special places and prepare to spend
time there for a few days, getting to know them and the local people in
different lights, weather and moods.
5. Let go of expectations
pilgrimage is a gradual process of unfolding and discovery rather than a goal in
itself. Spiritual experiences have a disconcerting tendency to happen at the least
expected times and places, and require us to stay open to a higher agenda than our
own.
6. Embrace your shadow
delays and inconveniences on the road or in less-than-perfect lodgings can make us
annoyed and irritated. At these times, we tend to see these things as roadblocks to the
spiritual experience we hoped to have, whereas they are all part of it. If we observe
ourselves compassionately under stress, we can learn a lot about how we operate out of our
comfort zone.
7. Wherever you go,
there you are or as St. Brigit once told some pilgrims:
Tis
labour great and profit small
to go to Rome;
Thou wilt not find the king at all
unless thou find him first at home. |
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