Sunday, September 28, 2008

As Fate Would Have It...



Of all the apartments and all the people in Spain, the place we ended up living happens to have an American roommate. Blake, it turns out, is from Georgia, a fact we established when we first met. We joked about trying to find the American football games at a bar but, since the Alabama Georgia game started at 2 AM our time and, well, it's Spain, I didn't give it too much thought. Who would have thought that last night I would be sitting on the couch in my Spanish apartment, watching pay per view computer feed of Alabama CREAMING Georgia? (For those of you who did not watch or do not know, Alabama is currently undefeated and has now beat one of the strongest, highly rated college teams). Woo! ROLL TIDE!!

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Angel of Alcala



Thank God for Abbie. She fetched us from the airport, put us up at her apartment for a few days, contacted her old boss on our behalf and got us jobs, served as a translator for us as we searched for our own place and purchased cell phones, showed us the basic geography of Alcala, introduced us to her favorite Spanish foods, and, most importantly, introduced us to several English speaking Spanish friends who are permanent residents of this city and will be here to offer advice as we go. Thanks to her, we now have a small network of contacts including the owner of a leasing agency and real estate company, a nurse, the head of a teaching agency, a bartender, a friend with a car, a homeowner in Barcelona, and several English teachers. Thanks to her, British House (an agency that contracts out teachers to businesses and academies in needs of English lessons) is finding us jobs, we have a few clients lined up for private lessons, we can find our apartment (and ask for directions if we get lost), we have signed a lease on a small room in an apartment (with a roommate from GEORGIA, USA!), we know how to make a basic dinner order, and we have phone numbers to distribute to potential clients. Muchas gracias to Abbie!

The Arrival

What a beautiful bundle of stresses. Craig and I made it through security in Atlanta and through a two hour layover in Toronto, onto a very very hot plane and into the city of Madrid. We thankfully (and sweatily) stepped off the plane and, upon reaching the smoky baggage claim, found that one of Craig's bags was happily riding the carousel. We waited for the rest of our luggage to appear. And waited. Waited. WAITED. My tired mind struggled to remember what was in each bag. We could always buy more clothes, more books, wash our flight undies in a bathroom and hang them to dry. The longer we stood, watching bags pass by that looked like ours but were not, the more I turned to resignation. So I would not have my very soft pajamas or my plug adapters. If I could just get some sleep, I would survive. I could deal with it later. The fatigue from the flight was such that when the bags finally showed up, one by one, twenty or thirty minutes later than the first, there was no celebration.

Craig has a friend that has been living in Spain for a few years. She happened to be in Madrid and had planned on meeting us at the airport and helping us out for a few days before she headed back to the states. We gathered our luggage and hauled two suitcases each through customs, then…no Abbie. We searched the arrivals salo. No Abbie. We exchanged cash and made a payphone call, but Abbie’s phone was unreachable. We searched more. No Abbie. I, in my state of ultimate calm resignation, sat on my suitcase and filed my nails, my exhaustion allowing no worry, as Craig jogged through the crowds. Finally we decided to drag our suitcases along with us and simply walk the airport in hope that she was lost. It is a small airport, and we quickly found Abbie…at a separate arrivals salo.

It was onto the bus directly, surrounded by bags and people giving us dirty looks. And in a puff of dark exhaust, we left Madrid. We climbed off that bus and found ourselves in a construction site where, rather than walking across the street we were forced to tow our bags up one ramp…then another, then another. Then down, and up another and onto a second bus. We pushed our bags into the storage compartment of another, larger bus, and found seats on the way to Alcala. When we reached our stop, no more than twenty minutes later, Abbie crawled into the storage hold to retrieve our apparently slippity-slidey suitcases. My over stimulated and exhausted brain, wandered, once again, to the possibilities. What would I do now, if the bus pulled away with Abbie sprawled out on her belly in the belly of a bus? I vaguely thought that although I did not know how to explain to a driver what was going on, I could probably wave my arms and shout, which would be enough. Luckily, the driver was watching us in the mirror and waited patiently for us to close the doors and step away.

Abbie, all smiles, led us down narrow, seemingly endless streets, our luggage noisily clattering over the cobblestone behind us. Across town, up a flight of stairs, into, finally, a shower, a meal, and a bed.

This was our introduction to Spain.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Pushing Through the Last Minute Packing Rush

At this moment I am still in the United States, preparing for the trip across the Atlantic. This is Monday; Craig and I depart from Atlanta tomorrow at 5:30 PM central time via Air Canada. We have a two hour layover in Toronto and will arrive in Madrid at 11:30 AM central European time. I will update soon after we reach our destination: Alcalá de Henares.