PC #115 – Ask…

I'm preparing my “sizzle” reel for the PGS film now that the book is done and dusted.

A sizzle reel is like a promo reel, designed to get buyers or financiers to invest in the project.

Part of this reel is spent explaining the steps involved in working with your PGS – Stop, Listen, Trust, and Follow.

A very smart women whom I'm working with in Los Angeles took a look at the script, and she said: What about Ask?

I talked this over with Jennifer this morning. She's my learned sounding board on these kind of things. And Jennifer said absolutely, you have to ask the universe for guidance for what you want. How else does it know?

Isn't that what praying is?

Or meditations?

But you don't necessarily need to pray, or meditate, to enact your PGS – you just have to stop, and ask. Then you have to listen to what comes back, and trust what you've been told, then you have to follow that guidance. That advice.

Asking is a crucial step in this process of connecting to your innate wisdom. To your Higher Self. To your God Head, as the Hindus call it.

If you don't ask, you don't get.

 

 

PC #104 – Conversations…

One of the great pleasures of walking the Camino is the opportunity to have some pretty interesting conversations with some very interesting individuals.

The Camino acts as a lubricant. It gives you license to talk to people that you don't even know. That you only just met. That you wouldn't normally talk to.

Sometimes those conversations rarely get beyond blisters and sore feet and the next day's stage. There's a lot of those conversations on the Camino.

But then there's those conversations that you remember for the rest of your life. That change your life.

The Camino fosters intimacy. And so your talk can get very deep very fast.

And you might not ever see that person again.

One of my regrets from my Camino is not hanging back and talking to a bloke about the nature of the universe. An engineer from South Africa. I had more miles to do that day. I wished I'd stayed and talked to him.

These Camino conversations can be profound.

And can be part of the transformative process of the pilgrimage.

A chat that at the time seemed random and inconsequential can, on later reflection, be what you needed to fix what needed fixing.

The Camino works in mysterious ways…

 

 

Camino Portuguese Tour 2014

In April 2014, Bill Bennett will lead a tour from Porto to Santiago, arriving in time for the city’s extraordinary Easter celebrations.

Below are the main details:

  • Cost: US$3950 (twin share)
  • Fully guided Tour
  • 14 nights
  • *** Hotel accommodation
  • Breakfasts & dinners included
  • Side trip to Bom Jesus in Braga
  • Arrive in Santiago for Easter celebrations
  • Daily photographic tutorials
  • Dedicated van for transport of pack and pilgrim, if needed!
  • Local liaison & translator
  • Celebratory dinner in Santiago.
  • Pilgrim’s welcome pack; which includes Guidebook & maps, Credential, and Shell

Tour Operator – Flight Biz / Duncan Ford

Duncan Ford has been a Licensed Travel Agent for over twenty years. His company Flight Biz has been organizing spiritual tours for the past six years, and has sent over a thousand people to Brazil to visit John of God. He’s also been organizing art tours to Italy for the past eleven years.  (Licensed Travel Agent # 2TA5267)

FOR MORE INFORMATION, GO TO: 

http://www.pgspilgrimtours.com

TO BOOK –

Contact: Duncan Ford, Flight Biz
duncan@flightbiz.com
+61 403 035 463 m
+61 2 9569 8809 ah
http://www.flightbiz.com

FOR TOUR INFORMATION –

Bill Bennett
billpgstours@gmail.com
+61 412 944 777 m
Blog: www.pgspilgrimtours.com
Forum: www.pgsthewayforum.com
Photos: www.billbennett.zenfolio.com/Camino2013

#4 Walking away copy

PC #103 – A Camino movie?

I woke up with the fully formed idea for a Camino movie.

And my PGS telling me I should do it.

If this is like any other movie I've done, it will now take a minimum of two years to get it to financing stage. Getting the script right.

Then another two to three years before it hits the screens.

That's how long movies take to make.

You need a great script to attract cast, and you need great cast to attract finance. The film industry works in a very linear manner.

But, the way I'm thinking of tackling it, it will have universal appeal. And hey, I've done the research already!

But, should I do it?

If the film gets made, it will mean more people walking the Camino.

Personally, I've never seen that as an issue.

If the Camino is so transformative and restorative – if it has spiritual and health and social benefits – then why shouldn't more people know about it?

 

 

PC #103 – The Importance of Story

I spent this evening watching a fascinating documentary with my son. It was called Indie Game – The Movie. And it was about several independent video game designers, and what they went through to make their games.

They were/are true geniuses, and extraordinary artists.

I don’t play videogames – never have, and I don’t have the time now to learn the language. But the film spoke to me about the shifting shape of story, and the importance of story in our lives.

These videogames, the really smart ones (and yes, believe me there are some incredibly smart and artistic games out there) just open out the mind. Not all video games are violent shoot-em-ups with blood and gore, just like all movies aren’t dumb franchise tentpoles.

There are some amazing independent art films made each year, just like there are some amazing independent videogames.

The capacity to tell stories in different forms has exploded in recent times. The best videogames tell the most touching and profound stories. E-publishing has opened up opportunities for authors who might have been denied a platform in past years – denied by agents and publishers who are now scratching to hold onto their jobs in a quickly shifting landscape.

Journalism too is undergoing fundamental change. Photojournalism too. Bloggers and others are shifting into the place where journalists once reigned supreme.

But we still need quality journalism. We still need the Woodwards and Bernsteins. The Seymour Hershs. (He broke the My Lai massacre, and changed the course of the Vietnam War. He later broke Abu Grhaib.)

Blogs are a new form of storytelling. Twitter is instantaneous communication, but in 140 characters twitterers, (or “twits!”) tell their stories. Facebook and Instagram are a new form of storytelling too. YouTube and Vimeo offer the kind of video storytelling that wasn’t possible ten years ago.

We need stories. We need stories to learn, to grow, to understand, to proselytise, to change the world.

I am proud to say I’m a storyteller.

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PC #101 – Guest post – Jill Momper

Jill Momper is an extraordinary lady who, at the tender age of 70, is going to walk the Camino for the first time next year.

She lives in a small town north of Atlanta, Georgia. Here she tells us a little bit about herself, and her thoughts and feelings in preparing for the Camino.

JILL MOMPER – 

I’ve never lived more than 50 miles from where I grew up, although I’ve traveled out of the country many times. I belong to a local hiking club and we hike frequently in the North GA mountains near the start of the Appalachian Trail.

I recently started a walking group of retired women. We call ourselves ‘the street walkers’ as we carry out our walks around town on city streets. I can tell you the name raises some eyebrows 🙂

I retired 5 years ago after working in marketing and advertising for 30 years.

I’m not sure what first sparked my interest in the Camino. I’ve gathered together all the articles and books I’ve collected for more than 10 years, and can find no beginning.  Just the date of an article I printed off the internet of September 16, 2003.

I’ve mentioned the Camino in conversation a few times over the years; our church sent the youth group to Spain two years ago and they walked a few miles which brought it back to mind. But it was a chance conversation with my son, where I said I’d always wanted to go but couldn’t find anyone else interested, and he said he’d love to walk with me.

It was the last thing I ever thought I’d hear from him, being a husband and father of 4 small children. It was then I decided to pursue my dream whether he can join me or not.

In February of this year we both attended a meeting about walking the Camino at an REI in Atlanta conducted by Tom Beck, founder of the Atlanta chapter of Americans on the Camino.  He has graciously offered to help me plan my way.

About myself.  I’ve always been a walker, my family were walkers. All the trips I’ve taken in the last 15 years involved hiking. Perhaps my PGS has been preparing me for this?

I am married to a man who hates to walk, which is funny because I plan our vacations and that’s what they revolve around. On our last trip, he said he was finished with hiking. So, that gave me permission to go this one alone.  And isn’t the Camino a solitary experience anyway?

I don’t know why I’m going, I just am.

Everything I’ve read says the countryside is beautiful and it is a life changing experience. What I’d like to do is rediscover the essential Jill, unencumbered by monikers such as wife, mother, grandmother.

Currently, I intend to walk the Frances in September 2014 starting in Leon, but it will depend on how I’m feeling as to how far I can walk.  If not Leon, then Ponferrada, or at least Sarria.

What I fear is that I may have waited too long. At the age of 70 any kind of health issue can arise without warning. I am fairly fit, but my age definitely weighs on me.

I don’t fear the journey, just regrets for not going sooner.

Jill

PC #100 – End of Summer

Now that it's the end of summer, I'd be really interested to know how it panned out…

Did the crowds through July and August cause any problems for anyone?

Any accommodation issues?

If so, how did you cope? Did anyone end up sleeping in sports halls or some other make-shift shelter?

Any problems arising from pilgrims being stressed and cranky?

And were there a lot of young people on the Camino during the summer months?

I'm just curious about anecdotal information – particularly it would be interesting to hear from anyone who can compare this summer to previous years…

(Has the movie The Way significantly increased the numbers?)

 

PC #99 – The Faces of the Camino

Here is a photo taken this week at a Camino dinner in Sydney.

Jenny, Britta and Janet.

Three beautiful ladies, who radiate happiness and health and light.

Camino ladies.

Camino ladies

PC #98 – Getting my brace…

So I’ve bought my brace.

In this world of globalisation, I bought it online from a US store, and it’s being shipped to me here in Mudgee, Australia.

It’s costing exactly half what it would have cost, had I bought it in this country. (The same brace – in fact the previous version, not the latest version – is selling here for $1300 including shipping.)

I’m paying $680, including shipping from the US. (At checkout, I got a discount.)

I tried to buy it on ebay, but there were none in my size and configuration. (Right, medial, medium.)

So, hopefully now this will be the first step to healing my knee. Now I have to get these shots into my knee joint, which I’m told cost $500. I guess I can’t buy them on ebay!

Screen Shot 2013-09-08 at 12.30.42 PM

PC #97 – Politics & Religion

My mother told me I should never talk about politics and religion in polite company.

Is this blog polite company? Ha ha – sometimes I wonder!

Tonight in this country we’ll soon know who has won the next Federal election. At this stage, before polling closes, it looks like there will be a change of Government – from the Labour Party (social democrats) to the Liberal Coalition – the conservatives.

I don’t wish to discuss politics as such – but I have to say I am dismayed at the lack of personal integrity of all our major heads of state. I’m not sure if I’ve become too cynical with my shifting from being a young person to an old person (having just turned 60), however I see time and again politicians of all persuasions openly tell lies to gain and hold onto power.

Am I being too naive to expect honesty and integrity from the people we vote to lead us?

Who is there now for young people to respect?

Our sporting heroes get drunk, rape women, and set fire to dwarves. Our business leaders pay 1% tax and use clever highly paid accountants to find tax havens to avoid their responsibilities, while nine-to-five workers have to pay 40% tax and more. Our church leaders protect pedophiles.

Who is there to respect?

There is a small political party here in Australia called The Greens. The Greens advocate the protection of the environment, and embrace policies that are based on ethics and morals. The press and media laugh at them. They call them Marxists on bicycles.

They got my vote.

Greens-Logo images images-1