Home sweet home. I'm back
in Klamath Falls where it’s cold and dreary, with lows in the low-20s and
another storm coming in this weekend.
Quite a shock from the routine mid-70s and sunny skies of Mexico.
Once the Festival Cervantino concluded at the end of
October, life in Guanajuato returned more or less to normal. By this time, I was hosting a bad and
persistent cold and cough and energy was down quite a bit. With no great concerts to tempt me out at
night, I usually got back up to my house by mid-afternoon and stayed in until
the next morning. Mary was with me for
ten days, and she went home with a cold, too.
Still, she loved it there as much as I did, and was out and
about on her own while I was in school.
She was also picking up Spanish at an alarming rate, mostly from her
conversations with Blanca, from whom I rented a room. They hit it off like old friends, and I
learned that Blanca actually spoke just a little English, although she only
spoke Spanish to me.
By the end of week four after Mary had gone back home, I
started to feel a little bored with my classes and the whole Mexico thing and was
mostly just waiting out the time until I returned home. How much more Spanish could I learn in a
week, anyway?
Fortunately, my attitude turned for the better for week five. November 2nd is Day of the Dead, and
the Mexican students studying English at our school made an altar for a
secretary who passed away last year. [See below] They prepared a little
presentation for the rest of us in English, and we in return did the same about
Halloween in Spanish. One of my Mexican
instructors asked me what a witch hunt was, and I explained a little about the
McCarthy era to her and made it clear that witch hunts and Halloween aren’t
related. I was proud of how well I did
until I realized my last words, “no son relajados,” mean “are not
relaxed.” Oops. I meant “relacionados,” but it was too late.
The altars and ceremonies are very formal, including, of
course, the macabre elements of skulls and dancing skeletons that we Anglos
find a little weird. I can only say I thought
the combination of reverence and playfulness was a refreshing take on the whole
death thing.
I took Saturday as an extra day to get ready and make one
last, leisurely walk around the Centro of Guanajuato. I was being more careful about what I ate for
the last week, so I had a so-so lunch in one of the better restaurants. For really good Mexican food, I had to go
into the small, seedy looking cafés with usually only two or three cramped tables
and just pick something off the menu, even though I couldn’t understand much of
what I had ordered. I never regretted a
decision. I also never had any stomach problems.
Sunday morning was sad as I finished packing up and then
said goodbye to Blanca. Elias, a driver
from school, took me out to the airport and we had a nice chat about this and
that. As long as a conversation partner
talked slow enough, I could follow pretty much whatever we were talking about. I still need a lot of practice on the real
Spanish that all native speakers use among themselves, but even here I’m
starting to make progress. Soap operas
and movies when I can get them are the best practice for this, although as I
said earlier, I can only take soap operas in very small doses. Still, I made a huge language leap in five
weeks, even though my Spanish can still only be described as limited and
halting. The challenge now, as always,
will be in finding ways to continue to study in a town that offers little in
the way of classes. I’m meeting weekly
with two conversation partners, Leticia and Antonio, and they are very helpful,
but it takes a lot more than two hours a week to continue to make
progress.
Flying out from Guanajuato, I looked down on Mexico. What I know about the violence and brutality
that are so common in most of the country was in such contrast to the friendly,
genuinely happy demeanor of almost everyone I met or worked with. I don’t feel any particular desire to retire
as an expat in Mexico or anyplace else, but if I did I can’t imagine a better
place to live than Guanajuato. And yet,
there’s that feeling that no place in Mexico can stay free for long from the
kind of terrorism that has affected most of the rest of the country. I can only hope I’m wrong and things take a
slow turn for the better rather than the worse.
Here’s the most important thing I learned in Mexico: Mexicans are proud of their country. They have so many reasons to be so. If I were Mexican, I’d be proud, too.
3 comments:
Ross,
Thank you so much for the updates! I have said many times that I desired to learn Spanish; you have made me want to follow in your footsteps!
Awesome!
Glad you enjoyed it, Jason.
It's hard to study Spanish here in the basin, but if you can carve out an hour a day for four days a week, it's the best available. The bad part is there is very little Spanish spoken in class. Still, you'll get a good start on basic grammar and vocabulary, and good study materials to use at home.
I love it. For me, once I started I couldn't let go. I have friends, though, who just found it too hard to stay with and didn't have that much drive.
Also, it helps to be retired.
ross
"It" being the intro to Spanish class at OIT.
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