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Showing posts from September 9, 2025

The Two Gorges.

He had walked out of the gorge, a place of fertile chaos, and into the foothills of a new reality. The underpass, "el primero de muchos," was a sign of what was to come—a world of underpasses and overpasses, of man-made barriers and concrete paths. He had chosen to follow the yellow arrows out of the multiplex, a wart of a place that promised many options but delivered only one answer. He was a Son of Seth using Cain's own tools to escape the trap of the world he had created. He found a quiet, hidden reward for his choice. The bull ants at his feet, small and determined, were a living testament to a world that would endure. The yellow arrows, which he had once seen as a symbol of external order, were now a sign of his own freedom, pointing not to the aisles of a supermarket, but to Santiago. The Carrefour and its meaningless aisles were buried in its own gorge, a void that had consumed itself with its own consumption. He was a pilgrim in two worlds now. The olives on his ...

Beside La Llobregat.

He had left the terracotta boots behind. The heavy, clay-caked feet of the solitary warrior were now just feet again, and the imprints they left in the mud were no longer a burden, but a testament to a quiet victory. With the last of the clay behind him, he moved up from the banks of the Llobregat, guided by the wild, yellow flowers of the fennel that grew along the path. The paw prints that had been a silent companion, a separate and solitary track through the terracotta, were a memory now, an ephemeral mark to be washed away by the next rain or buried by the relentless march of time. This was the truth he had found: the unity of his own quiet sufficiency and the enduring will of the Earth. He had seen the future, a terrifying vision of a world that had consumed itself, leaving behind only the broken monuments to its own hubris. He had heard the nightingale, a song of hope that would outlast the asphalt, and he had felt the weight of a lineage that stretched back through the millennia...

A Pilgrim of Two Realities

​The sun hung high in the sky, its heat a gentle weight upon his shoulders as Daniel walked, a solitary figure moving with a quiet purpose. The roar of the Llobregat was a constant companion, a deep, resonant rumble that spoke of both the torrent he had endured and the life it now carried. He was a pilgrim of two realities, his body on the path and his mind in a state of quiet reflection. ​He thought of the bread—the Pa de Pagès—and its honest, yellow crumb. A bread built for endurance, like himself, a bread that contained within its very substance the bitter, nutty truth of fenugreek. It was not a loaf of fleeting pleasure but of deep, lasting sustenance, a testament to the wisdom of the Forn de Cabrianes and its founding in 1933. The bakery had endured a civil war, a world war, and the relentless passage of time; a living metaphor for his own survival in the face of a challenging upbringing. ​He remembered the water. The beastly torrent that had soaked him and forced him to a mom...

In From the Storm.

​The morning began on a terrace, a space of waiting and quiet. The rain was not a distraction, but a presence, a kind of fluid reality that made the Go Chill coffee taste of a distant coast. The drink was not a coffee, but a manufactured echo of an idea. It was a sweet and boring thing, a handful of dust that tasted of maltodextrin. But it did its job. It carried the soul to another place. ​The journey began not in the sun, but in the heart of a storm. The thunder was a chorus, a wild and powerful hymn, accompanied by the crunch of marching feet, a rhythmic testament to human purpose. The world was alive with sound. ​The path itself was a living thing. The puddles grew to become barriers, and the amphibian took over from the man. The socks, once white, became blood-stained and flooded, the water and the earth becoming one with the self. This was not a defeat, but a golden opportunity, a chance to cleanse the past. The feet of clay were not a weakness, but a sign of a deep and honest ...

On the fourth day...

On the fourth morning, he awoke to the familiar quiet of a new day. A routine began to unfold, a series of simple, purposeful actions: the repacking of his backpack, the brushing of his teeth, the turning of a key in a lock. He left the keys and replenished his flask with water at a font, and then, a small reward for his morning discipline, he awaited a coffee at Bar Monestir. As a wanderer and a wonderer, his mind began to make connections. The coffee, an espresso largo, was a ritual, a small moment of order and intensity before the road. The accompanying Vichy Catalán water was a perfect complement, with its unique, salty taste that cleansed the palate. His mind turned to the similar taste of Saint-Yorre in France, a taste that was both familiar and different, a small connection between two distant places. His peaceful morning was soon punctuated by the arrival of a French pilgrim, who, as a fellow traveller, became a mirror to his own journey. Their conversation turned to the new, b...