viernes, 19 de marzo de 2010

Sweeet.


So today was the Spanish version of Fathers Day. No school, shops are closed, everyone hits the plazas and cafes to do whatever they want. Waking up at 1 p.m. from a mighty nap I got AA batteries from a Chino store (God bless the Chinese and their work ethic) so I could actually take pictures. I realized that I haven't even posted photos from my Barcelona trip. I haven't even posted picture from my Calle del Muertos.

In my defense this site takes forever to load pictures and everyone knows that time passes 1 1/3 times faster in Europe than in America. So don't blame me! I can't even format these pages, you'll just have to enjoy that random beach pic of me. It was taken in Cadiz, Spain before Carnivale. (Oh jeeze, I still have to post those)
I'm just going to put up a 'best of sample taste package'. This is me in front of the house of the guy who wrote Don Quixote, the same person I am conversing with in this picture.









Me training to be a Nun. This is in the town of Alcala, a lil' bit outside of Madrid.











A memorial to the Spanish Civil War way out in the mountains. There are something like 40,000 soldiers buried here at Valle de los Caidos.









Me at the monument. The entire place was shut down for construction but they let our tour in so we had the whole plaza to ourselves.















Alright this is the Sagrada Familia, a cathedral in Barcelona that has been under construction for over 100 years. It's the craziest building I have ever seen and I don't have a picture that could give it justice. Definitely the highlight of our trip to Barcelona.
























This is on a dock in Barcelona looking out at the Mediterranean. This was my first time seeing the Sea, so it was pretty cool. Barcelona was just an awesome city all around - notice the short sleeves in March?








Alright it looks like I'm not allowed to upload any more pictures. I really do have a ton of pictures and I am sure that at some point in your life I will make you sit through a slide show of them all. I'll try to post more up later to at least finish my Barcelona trip.

sábado, 6 de marzo de 2010

Well this blogging project really fell through the roof did it not?

So I will start with a story:

A few nights ago a couple of friends of mine and I decided to traverse a section of town that is usually frequented by local youth who wish to escape the deadlock of popular Madrid youth nightlife. A string of old bars and localy owned markets border unkempt cobblestone sidewalk and narrow streets with stone apartments. The scene indeed gives the aura, a window, into the 19th century. Now there are just more Coca Cola signs. Here is a place where a man can finish his half bottle of scotch in the public eye as he lays half conscious under the statue of some heroic poet long dead as feral neighborhood dogs run from bad street musician to an equally annoying pack of high school youth. Trash in the ancient gutters is not common nor is it rare, old grayed gentlemen walk each other to their favorite bar arm in arm. It is a place much as if Madrid took off the belt for the night and let Her gut hang out if only for a few hours.

My friends and I had finished our ceremonial circuit; a beer and a sandwich, a glass of wine at a slightly more up scale establishment, a haggled two pack from your friendly neighborhood Chinese street vendor. We had decided to make our way to a particularly busy plaza as the clock struck about 11 o' clock. It was a giant square of a plaza bordered by bars and apartments on all side, in the middle a circle with a victory arch and some standard historic statue and all around drunk youth conversing and playing guitar and breaking the public display of affection rules.

We nestled ourselves down and cracked open another cold one, content enough to survey the scene, allow light gossip, and to make fun of each other as requisite. After a solid twenty minutes immersed in a classic scene of Spanish night life I, as the furthest figure to the right, caught a strange sight in my periphery. To look over I saw a man not 70 and 5 years standing in front of me, staring. He had a long grey and white beard that met up with long grey and white hair which covered his wrinkled face like a peanut in an April storm. He stood simply enough, his body at a slight angle to my group but still his look was unquestionably upon me. I returned his gaze and at this silent contract he slowly crept up to me and revealed a newspaper that had been tucked in his sleeve. His other hand produced a pen.

"Te puedo ayudar?" I asked, seeing if there was something I could do for him to dispose of this sensitive situation. "Lo siento," I said "Pero no tengo dinero." Which is a very useful phrase when one needs to divert the constant barrage of attention from beggars and homeless.

The man looked at me solidly then raised the newspaper chest high as with the pen and began scribbling something in the space between two articles.

Are you concerned. He wrote.

At this point my new guest was observed by my friends who had ceased conversation to turn to me, showing what could be perhaps pity but also delight that I get the weird-o. My fascination was in that he refused to speak, did not write in Spanish, and stood politely for my response.

"Sobre que?" I asked, not prepared yet to abandon my Spanish. I peered as his aged hand floated to another part of the paper and scribbled something in my native language.

Because I am a stranger.

The situation came to grow stranger still. If he wanted to ask for money then he sure was doing it in a very elaborate way. I stammered, not having the vocabulary to meet this in Spanish and not knowing what the hell to say in English. I met him with a "No but...". Before I could finish my exchange he lifted the pen back to the newspaper.

Are you going to run away?

Uhhh. I looked at him and pointed to my friends to say that we are probably going to go to a restaurant or something, but they were gone. One was giddly retreating to the marble pillars outside of the plaza, the other slowly scooting away and planning his exodus. Bastardos. I met the gaze of this old man as he waited for my response, eternally patient. For whatever reason I met him with politeness and answered back "Uhhhhh I don't know. Maybe."

He then raised the pen one last time and with large looping letters he write simply.

You should.

Ok time to go. I grabbed my friends jacket and we quickly exited the plaza, all the while the old man stood in the same spot as he watched us go. We met up with our more intelligent friend and exchanged bewilderments. Holy cow. What the hell was that. Every part of me said that one more moment on the square and I would laying on the floor in my own blood as he snacked on my jugular vein. Maybe he was a prophet? Maybe a game show. Nope, he was just crazy.

Madrid.