The last five days have carried me in a quiet drift through the far northwest corner of Spain — Santiago, A Coruña, Fisterra — each place leaving its own soft mark on me.
Last Friday, our little band of pilgrims dissolved into different directions: some partings final, some temporary, some full with promises of future adventures. Usually, when I finish a Camino, I retreat inward, drawn into a private cocoon of reflection. But this time felt different. When I left for A Coruña, I carried a quiet joy in my chest, knowing I would see an old friend and then reunite with new ones for the journey to Fisterra.
A Coruña felt like a gentle reentry into urban life, its old town inviting me to get lost among tapas bars, its beach alive with the laughter of locals, the marina pulsing with the energy of wandering visitors. It was a soft landing, yet it reminded me how long it had been since I had let myself drift anonymously through a bustling city.








On Sunday, the train and taxi carried me quickly to the halfway point of the Camino de Fisterra. Tor and Hok were already waiting, and Eri arrived soon after. We shared drinks and dinner, our conversations spiraling into philosophical questions that only the Camino seems to inspire.








Monday’s walk to Cee was gentle, almost too easy, 20 kilometers along gravel paths and winding farm roads. We watched green hills roll past us until the sea revealed itself at the final turn, a sudden horizon that felt like a gift. We arrived in town, showered off the dust, and spent the afternoon in unhurried wandering and playful talk of creating a pilgrim’s albergue, a true oasis for souls like ours.
Tuesday brought a short 12-kilometer stroll to Fisterra. Those last 4 kilometers, we slipped off our shoes and let the Atlantic waves wash our feet, an unspoken ritual of release. I did not want to put my shoes back on; my feet felt baptized, unburdened.


















That evening, we met Pav from the Czech Republic, who carried a kindness that felt rare and luminous. She gathered us all to the beach with a picnic she had assembled from the local market. We watched the sun slip beneath the sea and shared a simple meal, salt in the air, laughter curling into the dusk.
Wednesday morning came too quickly. My friends walked me to the bus stop; we lingered in that last stretch of togetherness before scattering again. On the bus, I found an echo of the past weeks, a family from California we had crossed paths with many times. We shared a fleeting reunion before they vanished into Santiago’s labyrinth of streets and faces.
Today, Santiago feels different. The errands I had to run pulled me through its winding lanes, but beneath each step there was a low hum of melancholy. The familiar post-Camino ache settled into my bones, the tension between belonging and returning, between motion and stillness.



I realize now that my sadness is more than just an end-of-walk melancholy. It points to something deeper. In California, my social life has thinned over the years. Working from home, scattered friends, long quiet evenings, I have grown used to a certain solitude that no longer feels like choice. On the Camino, that solitude dissolves into shared meals, spontaneous laughter, the warmth of strangers who become family for a few days or a few weeks.
I can feel the shape of a question rising. What comes next? Paid work seems to be fading from my horizon, but what will I reach for instead? Social projects? Volunteering? Another country? Another Camino?
The Camino always has a way of peeling away the layers, of showing me what I did not know I was missing. And maybe this one is not quite finished with me yet. Maybe I am not quite ready to return. Maybe I never will be.
This is my final blog post from this Camino, and I want to thank each of you for following along with me, for walking beside me in spirit, sharing in the small joys and quiet reflections. If any of you have questions, thoughts, or simply want to talk more about the Camino, please reach out to me directly. I would be happy to share a conversation, just as I have shared these miles.


















































































