Stellen Sie sich diese Tango-Erinnerungen an Ihren Wänden vor!

Fresh & Cold: Barcelona

We are spending this winter in Barcelona, and the weather has turned colder with temperatures in the low 40s. Winter reminds us of our frailty. We approach the winter season with its colds, flus, and, of course, its numerous festive holidays, reunions, and parties.

The social season begins in mid-December and ends with the New Year celebration. Do you celebrate Christmas, Hanukkah, or Kwanzaa?  Do you relish this time of year by turning into a party animal? Or are you an introvert who hides for the month?

Celebrations

Many households celebrate the holidays with traditions that have been established for generations.  My small immigrant family consisted of a mother, a father, and three little girls. We spent most of our time together because the neighborhood we lived in [predominantly Italian] didn’t encourage intermixing among immigrants. The Italians all played together, the Puerto Ricans all spoke Spanish, and the Poles all spoke Polish.

This neighborhood

This neighborhood was located next to one of the Holland Tunnel’s entrances on the New Jersey side. Lots of dirt, noise, and traffic. We lived on the 5th floor walk-up in a two-bedroom apartment that was cramped and dark. The rooftop served as a playground.  No guardrails. No safety features. Just a large expanse of open roof with a view of the Hudson River and the Lower East Side.

The neighborhood was diverse. There was an Italian bakery, a Kosher butcher shop, a fishmonger and fruit store, and, of course, the corner store. Supermarkets as we know them now did not exist, except for the A&P, which was a small, localized market.

The corner store

The corner store was not only a convenience shop but also a social connector. It was a place to hang out and drink your soda, and chat with a friend.  This was the place your father sent you to buy cigarettes at 27 cents a pack or buy that container of milk late at night.

Besides the 5 story brick high-rise buildings, this neighborhood had a few two-story homes. Multiple generations of family members lived, sometimes sleeping three kids to a bed. The chatter of voices never stopped. On any warm summer evening after the supper together, people would hang out on their stoops [modern-day porches], chatting with folks as they walked on by. Sharing a joke, asking about a family member’s health, or simply trying to connect with others.

Living in Gracia

Currently, we are fortunate to live in Barcelona, this city has a connection which permits us to enjoy an easier-going lifestyle than Buenos Aires or Seattle.

The city offers incredible fresh food markets, cultural and artistic museums, a wide assortment of
restaurants, and bars all offering their wares at very reasonable pricing. These spaces all provide encounters with local culture.

And now, with the holidays imminent, there are a few special holiday activities in Barcelona, such as the Santa Llucia Fair, which dates back 237 years. “Located in front of the majestic cathedral, the fair’s distinctive charm captures the essence of the holidays. The stalls, filled with traditional Christmas products, offer a fantastic selection from nativity scenes, figures, and trees to crafts, moss, and herbs that fill the air with a heady fragrance.

At the moment

At the moment, it’s beginning to look and feel a lot like Christmas, with lots of decorations and sparkling lights. There are lustrous lights hanging on all major streets, creating a nightly magical glow. Massive holiday ornaments are strung across other streets, forming giant ribbons of light that blink on and off.
The night air is festive, and people seem delighted to celebrate the holidays.

Barcelona is situated on a plain with the Collserola mountain range to the west and the Mediterranean Sea to the east. We live in the neighborhood called Gracia, which is a hilltop. Here, there are predominantly 4- and 5-story brick apartments, with retail stores scattered across most first floors. This neighborhood, Gracia, was once a separate village but is now incorporated into the city.

Barcelona is a conglomerate of many small neighborhoods with stores, restaurants, and bars. With so many unique spaces, I am always marking new places on my map to visit as we pass by on the bus or taxi.

Such a different type of energy from a typical American city. Whose attributes include a myriad of box stores that present a very homogenized approach to retailing, with most merchandise identical to that in other stores.

Enjoying the differences

What I enjoy is the vast selection, whether it is food or clothing.

There’s a process of discovery here that doesn’t exist in many cities. Over the years, the world has become a smaller, more homogenised place without the diversity of the past.

Except here in Spain, where the spirit of diversity seems to have been nurtured and encouraged. On a typical block, there might be 3 fruit and vegetables stores, a few restaurants, the obligatory nail salon, and at least one pharmacy.

Walk another block, and the scene is repeated, but the order might be different.

For me,

For me, Barcelona has become a city that we are exploring neighborhood by neighborhood. There are many barrios ib Barcelona including Eixample that is totally about Gaudi, Barrio Gòtic the old section of the city, and of course, El Born, which is pretty trendy now.

When we are out at night, we have never felt we are in harm’s way but then again, we have both spent much time in big cities. We are not careless, and we always try to take a taxi home.

As we continue to get to know the city that we have chosen as our new home, we also discover the quirks of the people. Most people start working later and work much later into the evening. The city is very garrulous as the locals are friendly, insisting on embracing new friends with two kisses, one on each cheek. In this country, people love to chat about everything and anything. Engaging with strangers while waiting in a line is the standard.

A major nuisance

The major nuisance that we have noticed is the folks who travel to the city to get totally wasted and vomit in the streets, generally behaving stupidly, mostly 20-somethings from many different EU countries. Overtourism can ruin a city, but Barcelona, like a few others, is trying to limit it. Only the future will tell if the measures they are trying out today will be successful, encouraging tourist taxes to go up, probably as rigorous as other sanctions.

But with this city being the cultural mecca it is, the proposed limiting of tourism is difficult. Starting in 2026, cruise ships will be limited as to when they can visit the city, especially the day cruise boats. The town, like many other popular destinations, is trying to encourage cruises that start and end in the city, therefore attracting a better caliber of tourist.

As we have chosen to live in Barcelona for many reasons, we watch this dynamic city change and grow. It is such a pleasure to live in this city and to become a local, learning the ways of this city and sharing the stories of these discoveries.

Links

https://www.eseibusinessschool.com/culture-shocks-when-m

https://www.google.com/search?q=elevation+if+garcia+Barcelona+&client=ms-android-tmus-us-rvc3&sca_esv=ec9d1a2ade95c9b3&sxsrf=AE3TifNjehZDfqc1XObKkK-CzJdGSSbEaA%3A1764487298039&ei=gvArafWRAqTPwbkPzdnukAM&oq=elevation+if+garcia+Barcelona+&gs_lp=EhNtb2JpbGUtZ3dzLXdpei1zZXJwIh5lbGV2YXRpb24gaWYgZ2FyY2lhIEJhcmNlbG9uYSAyBxAhGKABGAoyBRAhGJ8FMgUQIRifBUjlOlCIDViSL3AAeACQAQCYAZACoAGzDKoBAzItN7gBA8gBAPgBAZgCB6AC6QzCAgoQIxiwAhiwAxgnwgILEAAYsAMYCBgNGB7CAg4QABiABBiwAxiGAxiKBcICCBAAGLADGO8FwgILEAAYgAQYsAMYogTCAggQABgIGA0YHsICCxAAGIAEGIYDGIoFwgIFEAAY7wWYAwDiAwUSATEgQIgGAZAGCZIHAzItN6AHzyWyBwMyLTe4B-kMwgcFMi01LjLIBzM&sclient=mobile-gws-wiz-serp



Entdecken Sie mehr von Traveling Tango

Melden Sie sich für ein Abonnement an, um die neuesten Beiträge per E-Mail zu erhalten.

Veröffentlicht von Ruth Offen

Ich habe mich für den Tango entschieden, weil ich den Lebensstil, die Umarmung und, ja, das Verkleiden liebe. In meiner Tango-Serie zeige ich Bilder aus aller Welt, die ich an den Orten aufgenommen habe, an denen ich getanzt habe: Spanien, Frankreich, Deutschland, Türkei, Kanada, Italien, Griechenland und die USA, aber hauptsächlich in Buenos Aires, Argentinien. Mit meinen geschriebenen Geschichten versuche ich, einige der Erfahrungen zu teilen, die bei mir geblieben sind... Eine wunderbare Umarmung, eine schöne Mahlzeit, ein etwas unangenehmer Moment bei einem Aufenthalt an einem Bahnhof oder Flughafen. Das sind die Momente, an die wir uns erinnern. Zu meiner Person: Geboren wurde ich in New Jersey, und nachdem ich in New York, Boston und San Francisco gelebt habe, zuletzt auf der Insel San Juan im Staat Washington, bin ich im Januar 2020 nach Buenos Aires gezogen. 38 Jahre lang war ich Kuratorin einer Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst, wo ich meine Fähigkeiten verfeinerte und visuelle Redakteurin wurde. Immer mit einer Kamera oder irgendeinem Bildaufnahmegerät im Schlepptau [einschließlich viel schwerer Ausrüstung], begann ich ungefähr zur gleichen Zeit mit dem Reisen und wurde vor etwa 12 Jahren in den Tango eingeführt. VIsuales Geschichtenerzählen beginnt mit einem Moment. Ein innerer Mechanismus wird durch eine Szene, ein Ereignis oder eine Bewegung ausgelöst und ... fertig ist das Foto. In anderen Fällen geht es um einen Farbsplitter oder etwas anderes Ungewöhnliches oder Gewöhnliches, das den Blick fesselt. Da ich inzwischen fließend Spanisch spreche, ist es mein Wunsch, dass meine Geschichten und Fotos die breitere Tango-Community und andere Reisende erreichen. Travelingtango bietet Übersetzungen ins Spanische, Italienische und Deutsche an. Abrazo!!!

Lassen Sie mich wissen, ob Ihnen diese Geschichte gefällt, indem Sie einen Kommentar hinterlassen

Diese Website verwendet Akismet, um Spam zu reduzieren. Erfahren Sie, wie Ihre Kommentardaten verarbeitet werden.

Entdecken Sie mehr von Traveling Tango

Jetzt abonnieren, um weiterzulesen und auf das gesamte Archiv zuzugreifen.

Weiterlesen

Entdecken Sie mehr von Traveling Tango

Jetzt abonnieren, um weiterzulesen und auf das gesamte Archiv zuzugreifen.

Weiterlesen