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Monday, December 26, 2005 The difference a day makes: Yesterday, dawn -- ![]() 24 hours later, after a night of rain, northern Vermont shrouded with mist and fog -- ![]() ![]() Madrid, te echo de menos. rws 1:50 PM [+] |
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Sunday, December 25, 2005 Sunrise, Christmas day 2005, northern Vermont: ![]() ![]() Madrid, te echo de menos. rws 9:36 AM [+] |
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Thursday, December 15, 2005 Dusk above la Plaza de Callao, Madrid: ![]() Madrid, te quiero. rws 1:15 PM [+] |
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Wednesday, December 14, 2005 [continued from entry of December 12] That last bit about feeling at home here? It's true, I do. Blah blah blah. So. Spectacular weather, feeling like the end of April in Vermont rather than mid-December, me with my jacket off, pleased to be where I was. Jorge called a motorcycle buddy, left a message, got a call back, the friend saying he'd be along soon. Julian appeared, he and Jorge talked, me mostly listening. Little traffic passed, apart from buses, the road apparently ending a mile or two on. Locals strolled by, lots of elderly folks out enjoying the day, the relative quiet. Across from us, a lane -- beginning with cobblestones, devolving quickly to dirt -- extended away from the road toward the hills, people wandered its length, their voices coming and going in the warm air. Conversation at our table flowed on, Jorge and Julian dipping into politics from time to time. Jorge has strong opinions when it comes to that realm and seems to think his views are not only incontestible when it comes to Spain, but also to the States, having spent a few weeks stateside a while back. I tend not to share his opinions and simply listen, saying little, letting it all go by. Not a bad way to do the political thing -- promotes more peace of mind on the personal level. (At least for me.) Feels much better than pulling on kneeboots and wading into the fray. The sun slipped down toward the hills, shadows stretched across the ground. Alberto -- Jorge's motorcycle buddy -- arrived, Julian took off. Alberto began agitating for a long, scenic ride. The air had begun losing its warm edge, I had the distinct feeling that a long ride would get real uncomfortable in no time flat, but stayed quiet, waiting to see how things went. The idea wound up going nowhere, I gave silent thanks then suggested a walk along the lane across from us instead. We paid up and headed off. A river ran through bottomland off to the left side of the path, el Rio Manzanares, the same waterway that runs through Madrid's west side, often appearing small and sad. Looking less sad here, and less like a river. More like a large creek, or a sizeable stand of marshland, with waterfowl hanging about. Turned out to be a nice walk, a fair number of people scattered around. (Also, a fair amount of trash. It does seem to be the case that without the drastically undervalued city cleaning crews, Madrid would quickly disappear beneath mountains of litter and rubbish.) The sun slid down behind the hills, the temperature immediately dropped, December reimposing itself. Jorge and Alberto conferred, decided we'd take a short ride to La Quinta, a place unknown to me. We returned to the bikes, mounted up, it immediately became clear that winter had returned. Jorge had talked quite a bit during the course of the day about the desireability of living in this area. When we passed through the village of El Pardo, he spotted a FOR RENT (SE ALQUILA) sign on the window of a flat above the main drag, made a circle through the village center, stopped to copy down the phone number on the sign. The one time he came up to my flat, he checked it out with the same kind of eye, as a potential squat. If I were living out of a small bedroom in my parents' place, I'd probably do the same thing. There is, or was, a military presence in El Pardo, I saw the words TODO POR LA PATRIA (ALL FOR THE FATHERLAND) inscribed in large letters on more than one martial-looking building and entranceway. A holdover from decades of dictatorship. And though Franco is buried at El Valle de los Caídos (The Valley of the Fallen) -- a grandiose memorial built by the forced labor of many thousands of prisoners belonging to the losing side of the civil war -- his family, according to Alberto, is buried at El Pardo, not far from where we ate lunch, enjoyed peace and sunlight. [To be continued] *********** Storefront, Madrid (or, well, maybe not): ![]() Madrid, te quiero. rws 1:55 PM [+] |
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Monday, December 12, 2005 The sudden reappearance of people (and resulting reanimation of my social life) continues. If I didn't know better, I'd think they were coming out of the woodwork in celebration of me leaving. Though in their defense, I notice they all seem to be assuming I'll be back and assume expressions of polite skepticism when I tell them I have no freakin' idea what the hell I'll be doing with myself come January or February. Saturday morning: my cellphone rang, the person on the other end turned out to be Jorge, suggesting a walk through the city center. Of course, said I, and rendezvoused with Himself shortly thereafter, following him through crowded streets awash with strong December sunlight. He was in motoring mode, striding along at a brisk enough pace that I had concentrate to stay with him while holding up my end of the conversation (in Castellano) and moving through groups of slower-moving pedestrians without shouldering them off the narrow sidewalks into oncoming traffic. We zipped through Chueca, through Sol, through la Plaza de Santa Ana and the narrow streets beyond, finally stopping at a bookstore I'd never been into, Desnivel, a great little shop with an extensive collection of books oriented around travel and outdoor activities. ![]() Jorge did research for a possible trip to the Alps in January, I snooped around, entertaining myself until we stepped back outside into a spectacular afternoon, warm enough that jackets could be left open. Warm enough that Jorge suggested a motorcycle ride out of the city center, an idea I was all over like a cheap suit. A fast walk back through the city center, through the crowds out enjoying the long weekend, to the flat belonging to Jorge's parents (where Himself is currently in residence) to pick up riding gear -- fleece, insulated gloves, helmets. Then back out to a local parking garage to retrieve J.'s ride. After which I found myself sitting behind Jorge, zipping through local streets, the bike heading north and out of the center. It had been years since I'd been on a motorcycle. And I'd never, up until Saturday, ridden as a passenger. Felt pretty weird to have someone right in front of me, someone else's helmet blocking the view. Kind of like being seated right behind a pillar at a concert or sporting event, having to peer around it any time I wanted to see what was going on. Jorge bought the bike -- a Harley, the sound of its exhaust loud and snotty, like a machine-gun with a nasty, insistent flatulence problem -- secondhand, the seats had apparently been modified. Whoever did the work left the passenger seat at a slight downward incline, so that every time Jorge hit the brake I found myself jerked forward, my adorable butt sliding alarmingly along the leather, our helmets clacking together. On top of that, the two sidebags were mounted close enough to the passenger footpegs that my feet couldn't get the kind of purchase that would hold me firmly in place. By the time I'd figured out how to maintain my spot behind the driver without every bump in the road turning my perch into an ejection seat, we'd left local streets for a six-lane highway, Jorge hitting the accelerator, passing other traffic with ease, scenery flying by in a blur of greenery and sunlight. The road eventually narrowed, traffic diminished, the area transitioning from urban to suburban to something between 'burbs and country, the Sierra rearing up to the north, peaks covered with snow. We'd entered the area of El Pardo by then, Jorge steered the bike off the two-lane into a service road that ran along the front of a housing development -- the one-story dwellings joined town-house style -- and into a parking space. We hopped off, he headed to a nearby front door to ring the bell, I stood unsuccessfully trying to convince the clasp for my helmet's neck-strap to come apart. No one answered the doorbell. An elderly woman a couple of houses down stood at her door watching us, Jorge asked her if the person he was looking for still lived there. She nodded, quickly retiring from view. Jorge rang the bell again, me still struggling with my helmet, feeling sillier with every passing second. The door suddenly opened, a guy with a long, narrow face appeared -- Jorge's friend, Julian, looking like a cross between John Kerry and Jim Nabors. They began blabbing, me still working away at the helmet clasp, finally interrupting them to ask Jorge for help, feeling like his incompetent, comic-relief sidekick. He got it easily apart, I ripped the helmet off, shook hands with Julian, then began doing and undoing the helmet clasp, practicing so that the next time I put the bugger on I wouldn't become Gabby Hayes to Jorge's Roy Rogers. They chatted, Jorge trying to convince Julian to join us for something to eat at a joint down the road, Julian seemed reluctant, slowly gave way, finally promised to put in an appearance a little later. Maybe. If he could. Jorge and I mounted up, headed down the service road to the restaurant. Parked, sat ourselves down at an outside table -- awash in sunlight, with a view of fields across the road stretching off toward hills. Ordered food, talked, soaked up a beautiful afternoon. With nothing on the agenda but soaking up a beautiful afternoon. The waiter brought two platters of excellent fare, and I realized all over again how well Spanish food suits me. A large, robust salad, a tortilla de patatas, decent bread, something to drink. Basic, satisfying, leaving me happier, more content than I could describe without boring you to desperate tears. In many ways, the trappings of life here fit me like a glove, it's as simple as that. I feel at home. [continued in entry of December 14] *********** This evening, along Gran Vía (with ghostly passerby): ![]() Madrid, te quiero. rws 7:42 AM [+] |
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Saturday, December 10, 2005 This evening -- dusk in Madrid's northern reaches, seen from La Quinta: ![]() Madrid, te quiero. rws 4:04 PM [+] |
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Friday, December 09, 2005 Earlier: me out doing the caffeine thing, making the slow swim back to something resembling full consciousness. Sitting in a café, reading the paper, pausing now and then to stare out the window, watch passing people. Of whom there were quite a few, as there generally are in the barrio's late-morning streets -- with a whole different look, though, a product of the long holiday week. Feeling vaguely like Christmas week, part I. Few individuals about in business dress or office worker attire. Most in the normal attire of normal life, many carrying shopping bags. The local holiday season was already well underway -- this week's two holidays, (el Día de la Constitución and el Día de la Inmaculada Concepción) in combination with lovely weather/mild temperatures, jacked up the energy level in a huge way, bringing everyone out into the streets. I wandered through the city center yesterday evening, discovering that the streets had effectively been taken over by an sprawling ocean of people that spilled out away from the center, the atmosphere big-time festive, any place looking like it had any vague connection with things christmassy mobbed with Spaniards out seeking diversion or reasons to spend money. Now and then a stray car or two tried to make their way through, the drivers wearing the anxious expressions of humans up against something over which they had control, moving along at a snail's pace, stopping frequently to wait for an opening that might allow them to inch slowly forward. ![]() Yesterday turned out to be a major socializing day, me meeting up first with one friend, N., in the early afternoon down in the La Latina district moving for food, drink, conversation (just us and half the local world), then with another, H., in the evening at a neighborhood café packed with loud, happy Spanish humans, followed by a long phone visit from a friend in the U.K. later on, stretching well on into the evening. Just what the doctor ordered after weeks in which it's felt like people have gone into hiding, not answering phone calls/email, me finding myself solo far too often, with far too much time on my hands. N. just bought a small flat here in the city, I offered the use of my few items of furniture during my coming absence. An idea I figured, for some reason, he'd turn down. He not only took me up on it (and so will have custody of my TV, the DVD/VCR, both of my beloved Ikea bentwood armchairs, and some stray lamps), he sprang for most of the afternoon's food/liquid refreshment. Feeling nicely like my own personal version of instant karma. Later, sitting across a teeny table from H. in a packed, far too trendy café, I got a fast, incisive sketch of current events. H. is a newscaster for one of Spain's few national television networks, he does me the favor of talking about Spain and its public figures in a concise, uncensored way. There are some seriously interesting fencing matches happening within the country's political universe right now, a good part of them centered around what's called the Estatut, the Catalan government's attempt to re-frame their autonomy, employing the controversial word 'nation.' There's nothing remotely like this happening in the States, it's fascinating to be here watching it unfold. As we got ready to go our separate ways, Christmas came up, me mentioning my love for this time of year. H. theorized that our love/hate/indifference for things yuletide has a direct connection with our childhood experience of the season, a take that might seem obvious to some. Got me thinking about the way my family did Christmas, the holidays of the year's final weeks being occasions that our clan -- a strange bunch with some difficult personalities and tensions at work -- rose to the occasion, transcending itself. Could be H.'s theory is right on the money in my case. (Or not. Got me.) Madrid, te quiero. rws 8:14 AM [+] |
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Tuesday, December 06, 2005 Yesterday morning: found myself awake early. Expecting, I think, a resumption of Friday's molar-rattling construction noise. Got up, did the shower/shave thing. Heard the workers climbing the stairs, shouting back and forth. Then they surprised me by disappearing into the flats being torn apart/rebuilt, closing the doors behind them -- something they did not seem to want to do on Friday. They're currently working down at the far end of the building now, the simple doors-closing muffled most of the destructo-soundtrack, producing a morning of relative peace and tranquility. (For which I gave thanks.) I celebrated by pulling on workout gear, heading out for a fast visit to the gym. Passed the workers' foreman out in the street, said a friendly hello, got a friendly hello in return. Stumbled into the gym, only half-awake. Stepped back out into the street a while later, happy I'd gotten the morning's suffering out of the way and could now go about getting contentedly caffeinated. Morning clouds had thinned, revealing skies of a certain kind of deep, magnetic blue, a color that attracts my attention as soon as it enters my field of vision, my gaze turning upward, a smile immediately taking form on my silly face. Got home (the doors to the flats under construction remained closed, I gave thanks all over again), changed clothes, went out to mail off my last Christmas card. The neighborhood estanco (tobacconist) functions as the local micro-post-office, the friendly, heavyset 40ish woman behind the counter weighed the envelope I handed over, pulled out the correct stamp, accepted my money. ![]() I mentioned that this was my final card for the Christmas season, she said that so far this year she'd hardly received any snailmail cards and didn't expect to receive many more -- most seemed to be coming by email and cellphone. I've done the email Christmas card thing in recent years and liked it, but had never heard about seasonal greetings by phonemail. She and I and the woman behind me in line spent a few minutes going on about it, getting a charge out of the idea of answering the phone and receiving a singing Christmas card. Found a mailbox, dumped the card, did the caffeine thing, got on with the day. This morning brought sunshine, blue December skies and quiet, nearly deserted streets. The kind of quiet the barrio experiences on holidays, in this case el Día de la Constitución (a document still only 27 years old, the country's political anchor after centuries of turbulent history, decades of dictatorship). Good conditions for a walk, passing through the city center as it slowly come to life. This morning around the barrio: posters, more posters, and a set of cheery figurines aimed at a small, select target market (not my cup of espresso, but to each their own): ![]() ![]() ![]() Madrid, te quiero. rws 8:27 AM [+] |
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Monday, December 05, 2005 Some days I seem to see worlds within worlds everywhere I go. ![]() Madrid, te quiero. rws 10:50 AM [+] |
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Sunday, December 04, 2005 These last couple of months here have been characterized by the growing feeling of a certain kind of diminishing return. Not that there haven't been things to appreciate: I'm getting plenty of work done. A couple of connections have been made with good people. Many of the background aspects that make life here rich remain reasons for pleasure, gratitude. But the number of items forming the counterweight to all that has grown in number, size and messiness, and the prospects have come to feel less and less promising. And behind it all, the ever-present construction around the neighborhood has steadily drawn closer*, finally materializing in this building, this floor, and is now, it seems, about to invade this flat -- crystallizing a swelling feeling of pressure, disruption. *...the vacant lot across this narrow street giving way to 2+ years of construction (producing a structure still not open to tenants, apart from a wine bar in the first floor), its neighboring buildings undergoing months of rehab, one still not finished.... During all this, I've been slaving away on turning this journal's first year into something that might stand up to being published, a year whose last few months included a long crisis in which I thought I'd reached the end of my time in Madrid, retreating to the States to scratch my head and figure out what the hell came next. I thought about that on Friday before giving notice and came across something I wrote back in the weeks leading up to the retreat stateside: Sometimes you have to know when to move on, trusting that better things await. I wrote that. If I didn't know better, I'd swear I experience the occasional nanosecond of lucidity. My landlord accepted my notice, generously offered to (a) let me leave stuff here in the flat, boxed up and locked away, until I can get back and clear it out, and (b) let me move back in once the work is finished and the place has become liveable again. They seem to think las obras might finish up quickly. They live a half-hour away, though, in one of Madrid's 'burbs. Me -- having watched construction/rehab spread through this barrio, seen buildings engulfed in scaffolding for months and months on end, having lived with the work in this building for the last two months, seen it steadily expand, grow more complicated, showing no sign of drawing to a close any time soon -- I'm not quite so optimistic. (Regardless, they might turn out to be right. As I've said many times, what do I know?) The upshot: could be that when I head back to the States on the 19th, dragging far more stuff with me than I'd expected to be dragging, my time here will be at its end. In the meantime, life continues, the days slip past. This week features two holidays, many folks will be taking some version of a long, long weekend. The initial wave of vacationers fled the city on Friday, many of those who remained in the city have been out shopping and/or partying. The last two mornings my eyes opened around 5, 6 a.m., the sounds of life carrying on down in the street continued much the same as when my eyes had closed a few hours earlier. I got up to empty the ballast, on the way back to bed and warm covers I saw that the 20-something woman who lives in a studio apartment across from here had returned from a long night of revelry and now sat at her computer, the shades up, lights blazing. (Yes, she was dressed decently, filthy minds.) When I roused myself for real around 9, her shades were down and remained down until late afternoon. A whole different cycle of living. I met a friend yesterday afternoon down in La Latina for a leisurely lunch of Indian food, the first Indian joint I've experienced here that I would recommend. La Latina: an interesting, funky, genuinely multi-cultural neighborhood, a place I haven't spent time in a long time. It was nice to be there sharing a nice meal, walking narrow streets afterward. I love this city. The thought of my time in it coming to an end does not leave me feeling content or tranquil. La Latina sidestreet, Madrid: ![]() ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Facts -- and nothing but facts -- about Dick Cheney. They sing. (For love.) Madrid, te quiero. rws 1:48 PM [+] |
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Thursday, December 01, 2005 The season's first real winter weather settled in here during the last week, nighttime temperatures in Madrid dropping to near freezing, plenty of snow falling in the mountains to the north. A slight jolt to the system, but a good one. Brisk, fresh. Cold enough that if I'm out for a long walk my hands begin aching, my face begins to get a bit stiff (so that my mouth has to work harder to produce clear speech, sometimes transforming my Spanish into a stream of embarrassingly comical sounds). Darkness has begun falling early, or as early as it gets here, the last traces of daylight disappearing not long after 6 p.m., Christmas lights softening the loss of sunshine. And maybe in part because of that last bit, the shortening of the days here hardly affects me at all. I'll be curious to see what it feels like being back in a part of the world where the lights need to go on at 4 or so. In fact, I'll be curious to be back there and see how things feel in general. This'll be the first time in a while I'll be in the States for the holidays. Here the biggest source of ongoing conflict seems to be the customary attack attitude of el Partido Popular toward the Socialist government. If the little bit of online chatter/news I've seen is accurate, one of the current major sources of conflict stateside -- apart from, er, everything having to do with Iraq, Bush, etc. -- is related to holiday season greetings/terminology. I can only shrug my shoulders at that. If folks want to look for reasons to be upset or outraged, they'll find them, and given the holiday season's importance and the current strange stateside atmosphere re: religious matters, it's logical that this season would be fertile ground for what the Spaniards call crispación. On the other hand, I can't think of anyone I know stateside who gives a rat's patoot whether we say Merry Christmas or Happy Holidays, or would be bothered by a hearty greeting of "Happy Hannukah!" or "Groovy Kwanzaa!", or who cares whether the big green thing in the corner of the living room is called a Christmas tree or a holiday shrub. Could be the instances of conflict are negligible compared to the overall seasonal okayness. I like this time of the year, and I'm not going to concern myself with sectarian goofiness, no matter which part of the ideological spectrum it's rooted in. Even if that means I have to live in my own adorable holiday fantasyland. But you don't want to hear about fantasylands and holiday vegetation. Neither do I, because today life tossed me a yuletide curve ball. It seems that the rehab work going on in this building [see, for example, entries of November 16, 18 and 25] has taken a sudden left-hand turn, the laborers discovering as they tore more and more of it apart that more and more of it needed to be torn apart. Work that began as a simple converting the piso across the hall from one living space into two, sprouted complications, followed by more complications, until that flat and its upstairs and downstairs neighbors had been gutted down to and including the beams/rafters. The ripping out of the neighboring flat's old kitchen this last week led them to rip apart that outside wall, then continue on up onto the roof, where they began ripping apart the structure above my kitchen ceiling. A knock on the door this afternoon turned out to be a couple of the workers stopping by to warn me that it's looking like the destructo-derby is now, unexpectedly, set to dig down through the roof into this flat, with the kitchen getting ripped out, possibly extending on into the space from there. ![]() Meaning if I hadn't arranged my life to return to the States a couple of weeks from now, I would have had to pack up my existence here and live in temporary quarters for an indeterminate period of time. Meanwhile, rain began coming down, and on waltzing into the kitchen, I stepped into a growing puddle of water, leading to the discovery that the work done outside the kitchen window in recent days has opened up yet more leakage. Add to the that the fact that once all this structural work is finished, they're going to cover the front of the building with scaffolding and spend weeks rehabbing it. (No sunlight! Frenzied workers right outside the windows! Dust! Noise! Yee-ha!) Add all this together and I'm thinking seriously that this may be my last month living in this piso. Which may mean the end of my time in Madrid. At least for now. Time will tell. Madrid, te quiero. rws 5:22 AM [+] |