"Remember Rilke's words to the young poet: "The necessary thing is after all but this: solitude, great inner solitude ... What goes on in your innermost being is worthy of your whole love; you must somehow keep working at it and not lose too much time and too much courage in clarifying your attitude toward people.""
"It's time to decide when to leave on your journey, during what season and what break in your own life, time to determine if you should depart alone or with a group. Time to take time seriously."
"There is another call, the one that arrives the day when what once worked no longer does. Sometimes people need a shock; sometimes a tocsin call. It is time for a wake-up call. A man is fired from a job; a child runs away from home; ulcers overtake the body. The ancients called this "soul loss". Today, the equivalent is the loss of meaning or purpose in our lives. There is a void where there should be what Gerard Manley Hopkins calls "juice and joy." The heart grows cold; life loses its vitality. Our accomplishments seem meaningless."
"For my travels through Turkey, I read two books of Sufi poetry, one by Rumi, the other an anthology of the great Sufi mystics. Each morning before I left, I read a page of poetry and teaching stories; by the time I landed in Turkey, my soul was already there waiting for me. Every day of my journey, from the Mystic Tea and Smoking Garden in Istanbul to Rumi's tomb in Konya, I continued to read the great mystic's work, and each time felt his ancient presence."
"Recall the invocation of the philosopher Søren Kirkegaard, who said, "Above all, do not lose your desire to walk: Every day I walk myself into a state of well-being and walk away from every illness; I have walked myself into my best thoughts.""
"For those of you about to embark on your own pilgrimage, your own sacred journey, I pass on to you what an old Irish poet once told me ont he cliffs of the Aran Islands: "We should all be grateful for the beauty of this world, but more, we should take the trouble to get off the bus of life and put the soles of our feet to the soul of the world and see those sacred sites with our own eyes."
"What can we learn from them, these pilgrims who have preceded us? Much, but I will content myself with a passing point or two. They tell us to be prepared to discover that from the spiritual point of view a journey is always something of a two-edged sword because of the dispersion which can result from contact with so much that is new. We cannot simply shut ourselves off from this newness or we might just as well stay at home - if we are going to travel we naturally with to learn something. But if the newness threathens to overwhelm us, it can occasion periodic hardenings of the ego, as if in reaction to the fear of losing ourselves through dispersal we find it necessary to shore up our identities. The smallness of these identities is certain to bring suffering, however, beginning with feelings of impatience and annoyance. The art is to learn to master today's unavoidable situation with as much equanimity as we can muster, in preparation for facing its sequel tomorrow."
"Pilgrimage means following in the footsteps of somebody or something we honor to pay homage. It revitalizes our lives, reinvigorates our very souls."
"To paraphrase Henry David Thoreau, I longed to travel deliberately, to encounter the "essential things" of history, venture somewhere strange and unknown, ancient and elemental."
"I remember him saying that making a pilgrimage was a way to prove your faith and find answers to your deepest questions."
"He had detected that I was at a crossroads in my life and seeking answers."
"There is exploration for the scholar and the scientist, still eager to encounter the unknown and add to the human legacy of knowledge."
"For those of us fascinated with the spiritual quest, the deepening of our journeys begins the moment we begin to ask what is sacred to us: architecture, history, music, books, nature, food, religious heritage, family history, the lives of saints, scholars, heroes, artists?"
"He so rarely used upbeat words, so when he did I knew he meant it."
"Whether we are on vacation, a business trip, or a far-flung adventure tour, we can look at the trying times along the road as either torment or chances to "stretch" ourselves."
"To the rapscallion rover Mark Twain, long journeys held out the possibility of self-improvement: "Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.""
"Participation can be communal, as was scholar China Galland's march with a million other pilgrims to the Shrine of Our Lady of Czestochowa in Jasna Gora Monastery, Poland."
"We can only discover the real thing through deep observation, by the slow accretion of details."
"Integral to the art of travel is the longing to break away from the stultifying habits of our lives at home, and to break away for however long it takes to once again truly see the world around us."
"To believe that 6,000 years ago, lasting for thousands of years, there was a viable, nonpatriarchal world, with its own complicated and vibrant myths, symbols, and rituals [...]"
"Often, I have thought about those awe-inspired medieval pilgrims to the Temple of Time in Rome, where the first public clock was displayed. Crowds waited for hours to file past the elaborate clockworks, torn between admiration for the wondrous precision, and suspicion, for they knew that their time was no longer theirs."
"Her worldly possessions consisted of nothing but a comb, a toothbrush, a ballpoint pen, handouts of her condensed message of peace to all who cared to hear, and her mail."
"In Joseph Campbell's popular book of essays Myths to Live By, he described something pertinent to our theme of sacred journeys: "The ultimate aim of the quest, if one is to return, must be neither release nor ecstasy for oneself, but the wisdom and the power to serve others.""
"In his book, The Outermost House, Henry Beston describes how when he was thirty-six years old, in 1927, he decided he needed to find "essentials." In the tradition of the Transcendentalists, he went into solitude on Cape Cod to see for himself the "elemental presences" that dwelled there and to witness the "incomparable pageant of nature and the year.""
"Peter Harbison writes in his history of Irish pilgrimage, "For Ireland, pilgrimage is a pious exercise that has helped to fulfill religious needs and yearnings for more than 1,400 years." Several forms of pilgrimage have flourished there. There was the ascetic, which meant leaving behind one's land forever to embark on a life-until-death pilgrimage, [...]"
"For Miller, Epidaurus was a balm, a cure for his aching heart and soul."
"At sites such as Delphi, Epidaurus, Konya, Ephesus, places where the collective dreamings of pilgrims over the centuries produces a hypnotic effect in the air, it is a small good thing to pray upon rising."
"The ancient Persians said, "If fate throws a knife at you, you can catch it either by the blade or the handle.""
"Never doubt for a moment that there will be darkness and disappointment on your travels. The question is, How much courage can we muster to deal with it and move on? Can we transform painful moments into instructive ones? How quick are our reflexes?"
"What is far more difficult is be grateful for the hardships along the road. His Holiness the Dalai Lama has said, "If you utilize obstacles properly, then they strengthen your courage and they also give you more intelligence, more wisdom." But if you use them in the wrong way, he adds, laughing gently, then you will feel "discouraged, failure, depression.""
" [...] are feeling angry with other travelers in your group or toward the local people you are encountering. What to do? Try taking a day to brood. Take your good old time, by yourself, and sit on it. Time and patience are the most natural therapists in the world. Chances are that the frustration you are feeling comes from what you're missing more than from what you're seeing."
"And yet, as Aldous Huxley has written, "Experience is not what happens to you, it is what you do with what happens to you."
" "I'm a soul in wonder ... I'm a soul in wonder ... I'm a soul in wonder," Van Morrison chants. It's the finest description of the pilgrim I know."
"Here are a few that have helped me find my way in many a strange city and country: How was this city founded? What is the oldest building and street in town? [...] Where is the best place to watch the sunrise? Where can I find the most authentic music? Who is the most beloved poet here? Where can I find the best bookstore? Where can I go for a contemplative afternoon? Is there a promenade at dusk or dawn?"
"Soulful travel is the art of finding beauty even in ruins, even in inclement weather, even in foul moods."
"The traveler soon learns that it is difficult to unlearn a lifetime of habitual seeing, the ordinary perception that gets one through a day at home but is inadequate to the task of comprehending the suddenly unfamiliar, strange, even marvelous things."
"If there is a trick to soulful travel, it is learning to see for yourself. To do this takes practice and a belief that it matters. The difference between pilgrim and tourist is the intention of attention, the quality of the curiosity."
"Imagine once again the goal of your journey. What is your way? How do you see yourself wending your way there? In what way are you walking? As a tourist in search of entertainment? A nomad adrift? An explorer?
"In "A Pilgrim", the narrator can choose to regard the neo-pilgrim on the road as just peculiar or as a messenger. So can we each time we meet a stranger - or even strange behavior - on the road."
"The purpose of the pilgrimage is to make life more meaningful."
"A vacation is easy to embark upon; everything has been laid out for us to have a predictable, comfortable, and reassuring holiday. But a pilgrimage is different; we are actually beckoning to the darkness in our lives. The fear is real."
"This is why the complete circle is a universal symbol for the soul - an image of wholeness - and the goal of the sacred journey is to become as whole again as possible. Our longing is the sign that there is a gap in the circle. Our life burns with the desire to complete the circuit with our journey."
"If it's impractical to carry a walking stick on your journey, an alternative is to remember to walk barefoot at least once a day."
"The beginning of the adventure of finding yourself is to lose your way!" - Joseph Campbell
"One cannot divine or forecast the conditions that will make happiness; one only stumbles upon them by chance, in a lucky hour, at the world's end somewhere, and holds fast to the days, as to fortune or fame." - Willa Cather
"When the moment arrived, it had a sense of inevitability."
"Try to imagine that you are leaving for a journey from which you may never return."
"If my trip is going to be sacred, I need to see differently. I need to think new thoughts, not just conditioned responses." - Trish