In the last blog of the season, Kari recaps a few important things about Pilgrim Lost Season Two and makes an honest plea for support as she and Tony look towards Season Three.
All in Celebration
In the last blog of the season, Kari recaps a few important things about Pilgrim Lost Season Two and makes an honest plea for support as she and Tony look towards Season Three.
As 2020 nears its end, it is nigh impossible to make our usual New Year’s resolutions and plans. In the last blog of the year, Kari invites us to lean into the challenging dichotomy of carrying hope while being present to what is.
As Pilgrim Lost finishes up our Season One, we want to take a moment to say a huge thank you to you, our listeners. We so appreciate you walking with us this past year and are always so excited (really we are!) to hear your stories and messages of how our conversations are inspiring or impacting you…
Seven years ago today my sister and I walked into the Plaza de Obradorio after finishing our 500-mile journey on the Camino de Santiago. When I realized that today was the seven year anniversary of that day, I decided to read an excerpt from the ending of my book…
Here at Pilgrim Lost, we like to say we are “inspired by the Camino de Santiago, but focused on life in the everyday.”
I will never forget the halfway point when I walked across Spain. It is marked by an ancient gate like something out of Greek mythology. Our co-pilgrims of generations past seemed to know that this moment needed memorializing.
It’s Christmas Eve.
Most of us are ready for the holidays- gifts are wrapped, the turkey is defrosting and you may have even poured yourself some boozy eggnog and are sitting down by the Christmas tree, taking in the beauty of the twinkling lights in the deepening twilight. It’s here and in those precious few days left before the ball drops that we begin reflecting on the last year and pondering our possible intentions for the next.
Last Sunday, Tony and I Iaunched the project that we have been working on all summer: Pilgrim Lost. We decided to celebrate the occasion with something that encompasses much of our dreams for our podcast and the conversations that birthed this project from the beginning: a Portland Pilgrimage…
Pilgrimage. What images does that term generate in your mind? Robed ascetics? Distant lands? Sojourners? Sore feet? Pilgrim Lost began because we believe that the transformative aspects of pilgrimage can be intertwined within the most normal patterns of life…
I am arriving in Santiago day after tomorrow. I realized a few days ago that I will be finishing this Camino in exactly the same amount of time as Lissa and I walked the first one … 40 days.