No Complaints…Shut Up and Walk: One Sexagenarian Man’s Unlikely Journey Along El Camino de Santiago
By Emmett Williams and Jasmyne Emmerick
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About this ebook
Emmett is a sexagenarian “every day” man. On the onset of his journey, Emmett is a healthy man, but has some minor physical limitation as the result of age. He simply and passionately recounts his forty-five days on the El Camino de Santiago de Compostela; the daily trials and overall triumph during an unusual vacation. While compassionately helping his wife, Monica, realize her dream; Emmett experiences an unlikely change within himself as the result of his unforgettable journey as he walked across Spain.
This book is for those seeking information of an experience on El Camino and arm-chair adventurers.
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Reviews for No Complaints…Shut Up and Walk
5 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Excellent book! Truly enjoyed it. I like to think that I have read a lot of "Camino" books, what separates this one is warmth and kindness of the author. Loved the pictures, too.
Book preview
No Complaints…Shut Up and Walk - Emmett Williams
No Complaints… Shut Up & Walk
A Calm on the Inner Lake Publication
Highland Lakes, New Jersey
www.calmontheinnerlake.com
Copyright May 2013 by Emmett Williams and Monica Y. Mason
First Edition, May 2013
Second Edition, January 2018
ISBN: 9781626756359
All rights reserved. No part of this story may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the author, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, contact the publishing company, Calm on the Inner Lake.
Book cover design by Calm on the Inner Lake
No Complaints… Shut Up and Walk logo by Personalized by Design
Dedicated to
Lemonté, Olyvia, and our future family lineage —
Always have a spirit of adventure and courage, so you may explore
and embrace enriching new experiences for your mind, body, and spirit.
Dad loves you.
and
In fond & thankful memory of
John Al
Ravera Chion
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Thank you to my family and friends who read my blog and encouraged me to write this book.
Thank you to Kristine Banek at Personalized by Design (www.personalizedbydesign.com) for her assistance and direction on the creation of my logo.
Thank you to Mary Loudin (Hewitt, New Jersey) who guided Monica through the initial editing process.
Thank you to The Sussex Bards, a local writer’s group who critique our writing, made editing suggestions and recommendations to enhance our storytelling.
Thank you to the many people who purchased and read our eBook released in 2013. This new version is mostly because of the feedback we received from your comments.
Most of all, thank you to my wife, Monica (Jasmyne Emmerick), who on many occasions has set aside her personal projects to help me to realize this dream. She worked diligently to acquire the knowledge and find the resources needed to produce and market this book.
Author’s notes
We wanted to respect the privacy of the people we met along the way and have changed their names in this book. However, their original names will always be affectionately remembered.
The US dollar/Euros in this edition are based on our 2011 pilgrimage. Those considering a Camino, should consult modern guidebooks, or resources, and use the current conversion rates.
Our Story
A short note before beginning
by Jasmyne Emmerick
I am proud to write this introductory and compile this book for my husband, Emmett Williams. I don’t think a young twenty-five-year-old, street-wise Emmett could have imagined he would become an author, let alone walk El Camino de Santiago de Compostela. El Camino, as it is also called, is a network of ancient Spanish routes leading to a cathedral in Santiago de Compostela in Spain, where the remains of the Apostle James are said to be buried. Its name may be translated as the path of Saint James by way of the field of stars, or Milky Way.
In addition to El Camino, it is referred to as The Way of St. James, or simply The Way.
El Camino’s most well-known origin is from the Catholic religious practice of plenary indulgences, or penitence emerging from the eleventh century. Even though there are over a thousand years of Christian influences on the Camino, the route allegedly predates Christianity to pagan cultures that revered the earth’s natural energy, or ley lines. Over the centuries, travelers of this ancient route have flourished and waned. In the U.S., the acclaim of the nearly forgotten passages became popularized with the release of Shirley MacLaine’s book, The Camino, in 2001. Since then there has been a world-wide resurgence of interest, and people of all nationalities are drawn to trek the pathways leading to Santiago.
The Camino Francés is the most popular route and stretches five hundred miles traversing northern Spain. The traditional starting point, provided one has the time (approximately thirty-five days) and resources, is St. Jean Pied de Port in France. Beginning there isn’t a requirement, but doing so provides what Carolyn Myss refers to in her book, Sacred Contracts, as an incubation period
and gestation for spiritual insight and revelation; and in some cases, physical, mental, or emotional healing. The route is well developed to accommodate and support pilgrims (persons walking the Camino) with a network of many albergues (inexpensive places to sleep), cafés, and water fountains. Anyone who completes a minimum of a hundred kilometers (62 miles), will receive a Compostela on their arrival in Santiago (a document written in Latin confirming their completion). Often people will extend their pilgrimage to the coastal towns of either Finisterre, or Muxía; each an additional eighty miles. In ancient days, Finisterre, was known as the end of the earth.
Following blue signs, yellow arrows, and scallop shells, pilgrims hike over the Pyrenees Mountains, through farmlands, pastures, woodlands, wheat fields, endless vineyards, fields of sunflowers, medieval and modern cities; and across streams and Roman bridges. Nature shrouds pilgrims in hues of blues, browns and greens of the Basque countryside; the golds, browns, and reds of the desert meseta; and the plush and fertile greenery of Galicia.
The appeal of the Camino varies from person to person, and there are no sacred prerequisites to walk The Way of St. James. Some walk to fulfill their religious devoutness, some in quest of spiritual enlightenment through disconnecting from trite routines of everyday life; and others for merely a unique travel adventure. The seed for the idea to walk The Way came to me after reading Shirley MacLaine’s story about the Camino while we lived in Garfield, New Jersey. Shortly after, Emmett’s job required him to fly to Georgia, every Monday, and return home on Friday. While packing to leave one Sunday, he asked if I had a book he could read. His question surprised me. I had never known Emmett to read novels, as he preferred the local newspaper, National Geographic and Smithsonian magazines. I gave him The Camino. When he finished, he commented, "I can do that [the Camino] one day." Somewhere in 2001, a mental note went onto our joint bucket list.
Life moved along and in 2010 my subconscious began to whisper to me. My career had stalled, and there was no potential for advancement in my current position. I wanted to leave my situation and re-invent myself, although it terrified me what this decision would mean. How could I leave my job security at an unstable time in the economy? Gas prices soared, unemployment climaxed above ten percent, and I had no post-secondary diploma or certified qualifications. Nonetheless, the unhappiness of my circumstances suffocated me.
In December, during a casual conversation, a friend mentioned James Michener’s book, The Drifters. It is about six young adults who wandered in eastern and southern Spain in the late 1960s. The romantic notion of drifting—an escape from my mundane and limited reality, captivated me. At the end of Michener’s book, one of the characters decided to write a thesis about the children of the Camino. A bell went off in my head. The Camino! A respite to clear the cobwebs of corporate stagnation and my addled-brain existence. It was an unconventional idea but my exasperated professional life allowed me to grasp at the possibility of a transformational journey promised in anything I had read about the Camino.
Two months later in January 2011, Emmett was forced into an unexpected and premature retirement. He was not mentally prepared for the watershed life event. In addition, the environment at the company where I worked had worsened for me and allowed the faint call to the Camino to louden.
I explained to Emmett I needed to do this, but it was up to him if he wanted to tag along. "Of course, I’m going with you! He responded with a mixture of concern about my undertaking such a long and difficult trip alone, and his own love for traveling. He was determined not to sit at home waiting for updates on my welfare and emails with pictures of Spain reading,
It’s so beautiful here,
I wish you were here," and the like.
By spring, it was clear a window of opportunity had presented itself. It was the right time to consider the adventure we had mused about a decade ago. There would be no better occasion to walk the Camino together as a couple. There is a sixteen-year age difference between us; Emmett was 61, and I was 45, so to wait until my sixties would have been unrealistic.
In the spring of 2011 we began making our plans. I purchased our airline tickets, researched and bought our gear (backpacks, boots, sleeping bags, etc.). We took mini-hikes in the wooded areas and parks surrounding our home while we discussed the sojourn ahead of us. We began letting family and friends know about our upcoming adventure. It took my mother some time to wrap her head around the type of trip we would take; after a few weeks she playfully asked, "So, that’s your idea of a vacation? A friend of Emmett’s mockingly asked,
Why would you walk 500 miles, when you could drive? Most people did not fully comprehend our decision, but most replied it was
cool," although not their type of vacation.
I went in search of an epiphany about my life and its direction, and Emmett wanted to travel to some place new. This is an important distinction, as we would learn unanticipated joy, magic, and blessings can be found without defining expectations.
We walked the Camino Francés in September and October 2011. If it had been possible, Emmett would have returned to the Camino again in 2012. I remembered a passage from the Brazilian author Paulo Coelho’s audiobook, The Pilgrimage, where Petrus encouraged Paulo to tell the story of his journey once he completed it:
This [El Camino] is the road of the common people… if you don’t know how to paint, write something… then regardless of where they are, people will be able to walk the Jacobean route, the Milky Way, the strange road to Santiago.
On the anniversary of our Camino start date, September 1, 2012, I urged Emmett to escape into his memories and relive each day of his Camino in a blog. He did this for himself, but as I reviewed his story, I began to delight in the reminiscence of our adventure as told from his perspective. Every day we made a post about Emmett’s Camino. Our friends and people from the American Pilgrims on the Camino (APOC) Facebook group began reading Emmett’s story. We were encouraged to consider authoring a travelogue
book, and we did. Our eBook was our third shared experience of the Camino. Although we knew little about publishing, an overwhelming synergy of circumstances and people presented themselves to put many resources at our disposal. As you will hear in Emmett’s account, "the Camino provides," even when you are no longer walking.
This book uses the daily entries written by Emmett in his blog. We have read and polished the entries to correct for grammatical errors, the overuse of some words, and its overall flow. The original version of our book was released in May 2013. In 2016 we decided to undertake another edit, based on customer feedback. However the original information and essence is unchanged. It is important to Emmett his original writing style and tone be maintained. He relishes in being an every-day
man and wants his persona to be conveyed. The Camino is, after all, for every man and woman, not for an elite, or pious few.
As I reflect on Emmett’s entries, I find it to be a story of mindfulness, renewal, perseverance, and even love: love of life, and between husband and wife. It is a memoir of a sexagenarian’s personal freedom and the joy he found once he faced and embraced the challenges of a five hundred mile foot-trek across northern Spain. I will always cherish my memories of the struggles and accomplishments with Emmett on our pilgrimage along El Camino de Santiago de Compostela.
Days 1 & 2
Highland Lakes, NJ – Madrid, Spain
Highland Lakes, New Jersey (USA)
On September 1, 2011, my wife, Monica, and I left our home in Highland Lakes, New Jersey, to begin our walk on El Camino de Santiago de Compostela (The Camino). Our plane departed in the evening from Newark Liberty International Airport. Before leaving, we had to finalize our packing. Everything we needed for our trip would be carried on our backs for the duration of our six-week journey, and our goal was to pack no more than ten percent of our ideal body weight. I guess as a man this was an easy task, but Monica had difficulty and had to make some last minute omissions.
The contents of our backpacks were: two changes of clothes, sleeping bag, sleeping mat, casual shoes, shower shoes, sleepwear, socks, first aid kit (with over-the-counter medicines and prescriptions), toiletries, a small Spanish language book, Camino guidebook, journals, duct tape, clothesline and pins, water bottles, and walking sticks. While it’s not recommended for a complete spiritual experience, we took a pocket camera for Monica, my video camera, our cell phones, in case we got separated; and an iPad. Finally, there was the paperwork — our plane tickets, passports, credit card, money, a pilgrim’s credencial (a passport for pilgrim-status verification), etc.
We took one last look at our checklist, agreed everything that could be done, had been done, and were driven to the airport by our house- and pet-sitter, Al. I sensed Monica’s anxiety, but for some reason I had no excitement. Don’t get me wrong, I was glad we were going. But how could I be overly eager about an experience of which I had little knowledge?
Madrid–Spain
We landed in Spain on September second at ten-thirty in the morning. We were immediately challenged to find our way to our accommodations for the evening, in a country where we did not speak the language and had no guide. Although expected, this uncertainty did not sit well with Monica, but I thrive on experiencing the unknown and feeling my way through. Since we needed to catch a train to Pamplona the next day, Monica had general information about a hotel (Lope de Vega) near the Atocha station. We went to the helpful tourist information desk at the airport. Thankfully, the lady spoke enough English to tell us which bus we should ride into the center of Madrid.
Once in the middle of the city, we walked to another visitor’s station to find the exact location of our reserved lodgings. After some back and forth walking, and with the use of a city map, we found the hotel and checked in. We were tired from the last-minute preparations, the long flight through the night, and the haphazard walk around Madrid. We wanted to take a much needed nap, but we were also hungry. This was to be our first encounter of trying to find a place to eat between two and four in the afternoon. During this time, nearly all of Spain shuts down for siesta. Shut down
may be a bit of