Define Success

I suppose I ought to comment on Bad Bunny’s Superbowl performance earlier this week. I confess I haven’t seen it in its entirety just yet – give me a few more days and then we’ll be on half term, and I’ll give it the attention it justly deserves. Instead, I thought I’d explore something else I saw on my newsfeed today.

Let’s talk about success and what it looks like. According to a survey conducted a few months ago by NBC’s News Decision Desk Poll on Gen Z – a generation from which I am removed by only a few years – the parameters for what constitutes success vary wildly between men and women on opposite ends of the political spectrum. I tend to do a bit of digging when I see stories like this, since you can’t take any news items at face value these days, but the results are certainly very believable.



The fact that neither children nor marital status were a priority for any demographic other than Trump-voting men is not really a surprise. When I asked my debating team to rank the success factors this afternoon, all three groups had children as their least important, and they are the demographic in the survey.

It’s equally unsurprising to see money concerns so high up the list for both male and female responses in both the Trump and Harris camps. There’s no dodging the fact that we’re living through a cost of living crisis in the West right now, and that Gen Z – and, it should be said, the tail end of the millennial generation, like myself – have been screwed over in a number of wicked ways: the rise of the smartphone, the surge in housing prices and university tuition and the creeping dread of AI, not to mention the anxiety crisis that has taken root in the fertile soil left behind by an almost total absence of conflict in the Western world and the genuine terror that has inspired for much of human history. When I was a kid and had yet to give the matter all that much thought, I remember wondering whether what the world needed was another damned good scrap just to let off some steam. Now that I’m older and potentially wiser, I’m not sure if I have entirely shaken that belief, though my reasoning may have changed somewhat.

If I have read the rubric correctly, those surveyed were asked to select the three factors that most aligned with their personal definition of success. Out of curiosity to see how I square with the generation below, I thought I’d rank them myself.

  1. Having a job or a career you find fulfilling
  2. Having children
  3. Being married
  4. Using your talents and resources to help others
  5. Having enough money to do the things you want to do
  6. Making your family or community proud
  7. Achieving financial independence
  8. Being spiritually grounded
  9. Having emotional stability
  10. Owning your own home
  11. Having no debt
  12. Fame and Influence
  13. Being able to retire early

Now, it’s not an entirely fair test, as I am neither a true Gen Z-er, nor am I American, nor did I vote in the US election. But it does throw up a number of concerns – namely, that my responses to the survey align more closely with the average male Trump voter. My students have often described me as one of the most liberal-minded teachers in the school – so do these responses say more about their world view or my ability to mask my true beliefs?

I’m not sure. To me, success is not something that can be quantified in wealth or status. It is inextricably tied up with the pursuit of destiny. Life is nothing but a cycle without a quest, and quests are all about success. If at first you don’t succeed, you simply pick yourself up and try again.

In two of my three success factors, I confess I am failing miserably. Despite my (apparently) outwardly liberal persona, I am deeply traditional at heart, and it should come as no surprise to any in my circle that I want nothing more from life than a wife and children someday. That would be the ultimate success. Love, companionship and parenthood – these are surely the greatest quests of all. Everything else is a gift.

My generation seems to have always been at odds with the idea of raising a family, continually bumping it down the to-do list until it has fallen into the dark gap behind the sofa, somewhere beneath going on holiday more than once a year and running the London Marathon. Perhaps that explains why the birth rate here in the UK is at its lowest point since records began, averaging around 1.4 children to each woman. In an increasingly faithless world, we have put personal success (with the emphasis on the silent letter “I” in personal) on a pedestal and worshipped it to excess, and now we are paying the price for it. Being the contrarian that I am, it is all I can do to fight a current that is doing its very best to drown me.

So while I have the rare privilege of finding my job endlessly fulfilling (I only considered leaving it once, and that was at the height of COVID’s online learning period), I must admit that, by my own definitions of success, I am – for the present – relatively unsuccessful.

But there are plenty of reasons to be happy in my success.

I love my job. It allows me to spend almost all of my waking hours using my knowledge and resources to help others.

By carrying the torch as a teacher for the fifth generation, I know that I am making my family proud, and that gives me an enormous sense of fulfilment.

For all the churches and services I have attended throughout my life, I may not have found a spiritual community that speaks to me just yet – not even along the Camino – but then, my faith has always been a very personal thing, and I do feel grounded under the aegis of la Virgen del Rocio, whose mark I have borne on my wrist for the best part of a year.

I don’t own my own home – I can’t think of many in my generation who do, besides a few of the privately-educated folks I was at university with – but again, I’m not an American, and I suspect that level of privacy and property has a lot more currency across the pond.

Debt is simply a fact of life for my generation, so I’m not even sure why that’s on the list, and while I have little time for fame or influence, I care even less for the idea of retiring early when the job I have to do is so important, so I’m quite happy for it to languish at the bottom of the list. Maybe my thoughts on that will change when I am older. I hope not.


Half term is around the corner. I’m going to try to get some more writing in ahead of Peru. Do stay tuned for updates on the itinerary! BB x

Punt

21.56. The Flat.

Iโ€™ve done it again. Iโ€™ve signed myself up for another mad adventure. As whim decisions go, this one is definitely up there with swapping jobs for a change of scene and flying to the States for a third date.

There wasnโ€™t even much of a build-up to it. I had a relatively quiet weekend not on duty. On Saturday morning I taught a couple of sixth form lessons, marked some speaking exams and wound down with a little Arkham City. By Sunday night I had a one-way ticket to Lima for the absurdly low price of ยฃ250. I still need to think about the return journey, but thatโ€™s a tomorrow problem.


Why now? Simply put Iโ€™ve been hankering for a proper adventure for a while now. Social media will do that to you, I suppose, though Iโ€™d be more inclined to believe that my full-on, six-days-a-week job played a larger role.

And why Peru? Well, thereโ€™s any number of reasons. The fact that itโ€™s a Spanish-speaking country is the main one, and the crazy bargain price I snagged is another (seriously, Iโ€™ve never found flights that cheap and Iโ€™ve been looking on and off for years) – and then, of course, thereโ€™s the wildlife, probably the most understated incentive behind any of my adventures.

Iโ€™ve been considering India, Japan and South Africa for the best part of ten years, but each has its own complications. India requires all of the jabs, Japan is expensive both to get to and to get around (never mind the language barrier), and South Africa – or at least the parts I want to see – is downright dangerous.

Thereโ€™s also the fact that I always feel I have to justify my holidays. As a Spanish teacher, exploring South America can only add to the sum of what I can pass on to the students under my aegis.

At least, thatโ€™s how I intend to justify gallivanting off to the land of the Incas for three weeks.


I read an article today about the fitness frenzy afflicting my generation (the millennials). Apparently we spend more on the gym, supplements and sportswear than we do on other social activities. Iโ€™m definitely not in that demographic, but I can believe that claim.

Iโ€™ve seen the shift before my very eyes in the time Iโ€™ve worked in boarding. I donโ€™t remember the gym being much of a feature when I was at school, or protein powder, or supplements, or any of that nonsense. Omega 3 fish oil, maybe, but none of this โ€œcutโ€ and โ€œbulkโ€ insanity. These days itโ€™s everywhere. The Underground train was full of garish posters selling the stuff two weeks ago, alongside a rosy ad for a fertility clinic. From PTs to PBs, designer shorts to designer bottles and all the weird chemistry-set-sounding stuff people ingest – and none of it cheap – fitness seems to have become the new luxury product on the market.

Perhaps thatโ€™s an inevitable outcome of a world where our work and most of our lives is so very (and depressingly) sedentary. I do worry about them, though. About how self-centred the world is becoming. About the mental health behind the physical wall.

Iโ€™m in no position to judge, of course. If I harbour any cynicism for this trend, itโ€™s largely because Iโ€™m well aware Iโ€™m on the outside looking in. Fitness is clearly a social activity, and here I am writing my thoughts on the matter from the quiet of my living room, surrounded by the thousand or so books Iโ€™ve managed to accrue while most of my contemporaries have been out making friends and finding lovers – or pumping iron. Instead, Iโ€™ve been building a library. Itโ€™s what my great-grandfather Mateo always wanted. Would he have wanted it for me though, I wonder?

Honestly, I think Iโ€™ve been into a gym three times in my life, but since two of them were duty supervision shifts for work, Iโ€™m not sure they count. All I know about the gym is that a very dear friend of mine went into one years ago and never came back. It might be a poor excuse, but itโ€™s a pretty major reason for my lifelong wariness of those places.


No. As usual, Iโ€™m fighting the current. Contrary to the rest of my generation, Iโ€™m prioritising my time, when and while I still have it, on the equally self-centred task of traveling solo, to learn as much about the world as I can. One day, if I should be so lucky, there may a family in my life, and while I would trade away all the things that I do for even one day of that traditional idyll, I am conscious that I would miss my freedom.

So Iโ€™m taking a punt and getting out of the country for a bit – and this time, to somewhere other than Spain (though admittedly I am spending the weekend prior in Madrid, as it brought the flight costs down by a couple of hundred).

Iโ€™m not really a planner, but this will definitely require a fair amount of it. Peru may be Spanish-speaking, but it definitely isnโ€™t Spain – itโ€™s a little over two and a half times the size. I donโ€™t intend to do Machu Picchu – like Petra, I fear the wonder of that vista from the Puerta del Sol has long been scourged by a horde of milenio photographers – so I will be seeking out some of the countryโ€™s other gems. Itโ€™s a work in progress, but for now, Iโ€™m thinking of:

  • The Nazca lines (from the air)
  • The Mummies of Chauchilla
  • Hummingbirds (wherever they may be!)
  • Semana Santa in Cusco
  • The Palomino islands (penguins, pelicans and sea lions)
  • Apurรญmac Canyon (to find an Andean condor or two)
  • Parque Nacional del Manu (for monkeys, mainly, but also to see the Amazon Rainforest on the other side of the Andes)
  • Taquile and the floating islands of the boatmen of Uros, Lake Titicaca (partly because itโ€™s come up in the same IB Language B past paper for seven years, but also because I read about them when I was seven and they fascinated me)
  • Sacsayhuaman (Inca ruins that arenโ€™t always in the cover of Wanderlust magazine – and one of the best place names in the Americas, period)
  • If time allows, possibly a mad jaunt over the border to La Paz and the Salar de Uyuni, the vast salt flats on the edge of the Atacama Desert that comprise the worldโ€™s largest natural sky-mirror

โ€ฆand all of that within three weeks. I donโ€™t much care for package tours, so Iโ€™m going to map out my own itinerary over the next month or so.

Catch me later when Iโ€™ve done a bit more reading. Iโ€™ll be less preachy and more teachy then, I hope. BB x

City of Memories

Hostal La Banda, Calle Dos de Mayo. Sevilla. 15.20.

The Americans have taken over. Theyโ€™re sitting at a table behind me discussing the local culture of Sevilla that interests them so, like baseball, 7-Eleven and Jello shots. One of them asks the receptionist for a board game and they set to a game of Cards Against Humanity.

Outside, the rain comes down. When it comes to the weather, Luck has not necessarily been on my side during this holiday. Fortunately, Iโ€™ve been to all of these places before and seen the main sights before, so my heart isnโ€™t bleeding over a few rain clouds. Itโ€™s actually quite relaxing, not having to dash off to this or that bit of sightseeing. It feels like living out here again. That was, I believe, the general idea.


Sevilla and I go way back. Iโ€™m not 100% certain, but I think came here for the first time in the summer of 2005, shortly after my parents bought the house in Olvera (that we still havenโ€™t managed to sell off, twenty years on). I donโ€™t remember much from that first visit beyond a flying visit to the Alcรกzar under a blazing sun, the noise and smell of the horses in the Plaza del Triunfo and a little blue notebook with a plastic cover where I kept a record of the animals I saw in my new country: black kites, bee-eaters, lesser kestrels and the cityโ€™s ubiquitous monk parakeets (which have only increased in number).

Since then, it has been the backdrop to a number of different episodes of my life.


Through my secondary school years, I made the odd pilgrimage to Doรฑana National Park with my mother. That was when Sevilla really started to become a fixture in my life. After Gatwick, itโ€™s probably the airport Iโ€™ve used the most. Mum and I always had the same ritual upon arrival: before anything else could be achieved, we had to grab a zumo natural or cafรฉ solo from one of the airport cafรฉs. We never stayed in the city, but it was our regular conduit to and from the sanctuary town of El Rocรญo.

It was also where we learned of the eruption of Eyjafjallajรถkull in 2010, as we had no WiFi at our campsite in El Rocรญo, and this was before the advent of mobile data. Youโ€™d have thought there might have been something on TV, but all we saw on the night of the eruption which grounded all flights across Europe was a brief noticiero questioning whether Spaniards actually pay attention to STOP signs, given that theyโ€™re written in English – a question I still ask myself today, as I wander around Sevilla.


When I moved to Spain for my first British Council placement in 2015 – when this blog began – it was Sevilla to which I came, suitcase in hand, to sit beneath the shade of a fig tree on the east bank of the Guadalquivir and think about the future.

I came back to Sevilla again and again when I got back in touch with my former classmates from Olvera, particularly a childhood sweetheart (who led me up the garden path for several months before throwing up a wall during a memorably awkward visit to Madrid). Every visit to the pueblo required just under an hourโ€™s commute across the city centre between Plaza de Armas and Prado de San Sebastiรกn. By the third or fourth visit, Iโ€™d got the route down to twenty-five minutes, though I did once make the trip in under ten when I was in danger of missing the last bus home.

It was around then, during those frenzied trips between Sevillaโ€™s bus stations, that I really fell in love with the Plazuela de Doรฑa Elvira, sitting as it does in the labyrinthine heart of the old city. Iโ€™ve made a point of stopping by ever since.


Halfway through that year, I took a friend to the city to show her the majesty of Semana Santa. My experience of Spainโ€™s Easter celebrations had previously been confined to Olvera, which was a highly unfair place to start – on everywhere else. Olveraโ€™s penitentes, demonstrating a strength bordering on the Herculean, have to navigate the monstrously steep gradients of the townโ€™s roads, constantly ducking and rising to avoid the low-hanging wires – all while carrying several tonnes of sacred wood and several hundred tapering candles within a precarious silk canopy. Caรญdas (falls) are not unheard of in Semana Santa, but I never saw the olvereรฑos break so much as a sweat for their endeavour.

After that, I might be forgiven for having exceptionally high standards for Semana Santa. Sevilla met them. We were walled in by three simultaneous processions, but a friendly Guardia unintentionally gave us front row seats to the greatest show in town when he shoved us unceremoniously with his baton out of the road and in front of the lines that had been growing along the side of the street all morning. Mรกlaga and La Mena may have raised my expectations even higher, but Iโ€™d like to go back and see Sevilla in its Easter glory again sometime.


By my mid-twenties, I could be pretty confident in saying that I knew few cities in the world better than Sevilla – including almost every city in my home country (with the possible exception of Canterbury). I do believe that I really could navigate this city blindfolded, if I had to. That was why I decided to take my second girlfriend there, less than a month after we started dating. I hoped that sharing the city with her would be like sharing my heart – since it had found its way in there a long time ago.

I took her to all my favourite places. Bar El Postiguillo. La Plazuela de Doรฑa Elvira. La Plaza del Cabildo. El Real Alcรกzar and El Herbolario. She smiled sweetly and played the part of my muse around the city, but I donโ€™t know if she felt the same way about the place as I did.

Later, when things started to fall apart, she told me Iโ€™d โ€œmissed the boatโ€ for teaching her Spanish. It was the confirmation Iโ€™d long suspected that I was never going to be able to share my undying love for this country with her, and the chief reason why I broke things off with her in the end. A heart divided cannot love.

I have no desire to return to America after the intensity of last summerโ€™s heartbreak. Sevilla, however, is immune. My heart could break a thousand times within its scented streets and still I would return.


In the last few years, Iโ€™ve led a couple of school trips here, too, playing the part of historian, quartermaster and tour guide. In this last capacity, Sevilla has sealed its place in my head as much as my heart, as I had to swot up on so much local history that I might as well have put on a red jacket and joined the cityโ€™s legion of guรญas turรญsticos.

And here I am again, as 2025 draws to a close. Itโ€™s been about twenty years since I first came here, and thatโ€™s around two thirds of my life. I donโ€™t doubt Iโ€™ll be back again soon, drawn by some invisible magnetism to her cobbled streets, her orange-scented courtyards and the irresistible joy of her people and their merry accent.

The local hostalero gave me the highest possible praise last night. My accent, while occasionally inflected with English, is unmistakably andaluz. Coming from an Andalusian, that is praise indeed – I usually get told I sound sureรฑo by northerners, but no de aquรญ by the southerners themselves, pointing to the east when I am in Cรกdiz and west when I am in Almerรญa. Thatโ€™s twice this year Iโ€™ve managed to blend in.

Itโ€™s about time I moved here. The stars are aligning. I only need the opportunity. BB x

Eulalia

Hotel Rambla Emรฉrita, Mรฉrida. 20.16.

Itโ€™s been raining all day again. I was out late with Tasha last night catching up on old times – neither of us could really believe that itโ€™s been nearly eight years since I left – so I didnโ€™t begrudge the downpour for a long and cosy morning in bed. You donโ€™t have to be busy every day of the holidays, even when youโ€™re abroad.

Luckily, I was all over Mรฉrida yesterday with my conjunto histรณrico ticket, granting access to all the cityโ€™s Roman ruins, so the only thing I missed out on was the Alcazaba, which I might visit tomorrow with Tasha and her boyfriend Antonio, if heโ€™s up and about. I donโ€™t think Iโ€™ve seen the Alcazaba before – one tends to focus on Mรฉridaโ€™s Roman history rather than its Moorish past, and there are older and more impressive alcazabas (the Spanish rendering of the Arabic qasbah) in Andalucรญa: Sevilla, Cรณrdoba and Granada, to name just the obvious ones.

Mรฉrida isnโ€™t unique in having a Roman amphitheatre either. Thereโ€™s a pretty spectacular one (albeit less often seen) in Santiponce that Iโ€™ve often seen from the bus on the way in from the north. But there are a few more unique treasures to be found in Extremaduraโ€™s administrative capital, and I thought Iโ€™d tell you about one such gem below.

Letโ€™s start with the lady of Mรฉrida – because every Spanish city has its special lady. This one is Santa Eulalia.


Eulalia of Mรฉrida stands tall above the other Christian saints of Spain, which is especially impressive as she only lived to around twelve years of age. A Roman Christian, she and her family were forbidden to worship God under the Persecution of Diocletian. Incensed, and unable to keep her faith to herself, Eulalia fled out of exile to the city of Emerita Augusta, where she openly challenged the local governor, Dacian, insulting the pagan gods whom she was commanded to worship. After a few desperate attempts to reason with her, Dacian had the girl beaten, tortured and burnt at the stake. According to legend, Eulalia is said to have mocked her tormentors until her dying breath, which came out in the form of a dove.

Eulalia was once a great deal more powerful than she is today. Before the rise of the cult of Santiago, it was Santa Eulalia de Mรฉrida in whom the Christian soldiers placed their trust as they made war on the Muslims occupying the lands their ancestors had once held; and it was to her tomb in Mรฉrida that thousands of pilgrims travelled during the Middle Ages, before Santiago Matamoros muscled her out of the picture.

At least one of my Protestant Christian friends has remarked at some point about the thin line between the Catholic Churchโ€™s veneration of saints and idol worship. Surely – they have reminded me – it is God and by proxy his son, Jesus Christ, to whom prayers should be made, not the pantheon of mortals who claim to be able to intercede on my behalf?

I can see the argument as plain as day. There are shops up and down this country selling nothing but saint souvenirs: votive candles, icons and fridge magnets, scented rosaries and car ornaments. I have a few myself – a family rosary from Villarrobledo and a more personal one from La Virgen del Rocรญo, which these days is on my person more often than not.

However, I donโ€™t think itโ€™s as simple as that. How frightfully urbane, to assume that the only true relationship with God is a detached and decidedly modern Western take on prayer. How tremendously big of us to assume that we can comprehend a force that it is, by its eternal nature, beyond our understanding. Community is a powerful agent – it seems only right that the spiritual world, Christian or no, has a network of pomps to streamline the neural network that binds us all together. On Earth as it is in Heaven, as they say.


Spain has a long history of wandering saints. Santiago journeyed beyond death to Galicia, sparking the most famous pilgrimage in Christendom. Guadalupe travelled from her mountain home to Mรฉxico to become one the most venerated Marian cults in the world. Eulalia was dug up and reinterred in Oviedo, where she became a figurehead of the Reconquista (I genuinely had no idea I was standing before her final resting place this summer). Teresa of รvilaโ€™s body parts have travelled all over, most famously her Incorruptible Hand, which used to grace Francisco Francoโ€™s desk.

Tomorrow, I make for Sevilla. Journeyโ€™s coming to an end. Iโ€™d better make sure Iโ€™m fully packed. BB x

The Seven Chairs

Hotel Rambla Emรฉrita, Mรฉrida. 20.30.

The starlings have finished their shift for the night and turned in their timecards. The yappy dog has taken over the night shift and is busy barking at every car that goes past. What the appeal may be in such scrappy scamps I cannot guess. If I worked in a profession that allowed me the time to have a dog, Iโ€™d want one that looked likeโ€ฆ well, a dog, I guess. A wolf, moreover. Like a sheepdog, a collie or a wolfhound.

Iโ€™m thinking out loud. But that, I guess, is what blogging is for. Anyway. Hereโ€™s my account of Mรฉrida, capital city of Extremadura, former heart of the Roman province of Lusitania, and the seat of the king in my novels.


As you leave the bus station on the south bank of the Guadiana River, youโ€™ll notice almost right away a cryptic row of sculptures on the riverbank. At first glance, they seem to spell out a word, but a closer look reveals that they arenโ€™t letters at all, but rather figurative depictions of thrones (if they were letters, I suppose they might spell out โ€œCEIOHADโ€, which – besides looking more like Irish than Spanish – is about as easy to understand as the Muqattฤt of the Qurโ€™an).

They are the work of local sculptor Rufino Mesa, native son of Valle de Santa Ana, and they pay homage to one of Mรฉridaโ€™s most cherished legends: that of the Seven Chairs that once stood outside the city.

According to legend, these enormous block of stone were the seats of seven Muslim princes (or kings, depending on the teller), who sat upon these ancient thrones to discuss matters of state. Given the fractious nature of the various Berber tribes who occupied the Iberian peninsula during the period of the Muslim conquest and the ensuing Taifa period when Al-Andalus splintered into a network of warring states, itโ€™s perfectly possible that such a drama might have played out at least once here.

Until the start of the 20th century, these seven chairs were still a visible feature of the city, sitting in a field a short distance from the edge of town: a strange but not entirely ignored feature of the city. The ring of stone had seen use as a bullring in the 18th century, and the story of the seven kings had evolved into legends of buried treasure, though no major excavation took place until the archaeological endeavours of Maximiliano Macรญas and Josรฉ Ramรณn Mรฉlida in 1910.

At the time, the site looked very different to how it does today:


Digging deep, Macรญas and Mรฉlida uncovered the roots of the seven chairs, revealing an enormous Roman theatre that had lain hidden beneath the earth for around fifteen hundred years. Its remains had long since been scavenged by the Visigoths and their Muslim successors for use in other constructions – such as the Grand Mosque of Cรณrdoba, where there can be little doubt that many of its original pillars may be found – but the greater part of the foundations remained preserved beneath the earth.


Itโ€™s not quite as well-preserved as the Roman complex at Jerash, but then, Mรฉrida sits on the bank of a great river – the Guadiana – and has been the site of battles both ancient and modern since the Teatro Romano was first built, and has therefore been a frontline city for much of its existence.

The modern reconstruction is an impressive feat, but more impressively still, it has been partially restored as a working theatre, hosting the Festival del Teatro Romano every summer. Iโ€™ve yet to see the festival with my own eyes, so it remains a bucket list item.


I spent nearly two hours wandering around the remains of the Theatre and Amphitheatre. Iโ€™ve been here before, of course – twice, at least, as I seem to recall a brief visit with IES Melรฉndez Valdรฉs – but this place loses nothing in the rediscovery.

I caught myself touching one of the ancient slabs of stone and wondering what it would be like to be hurled backwards in time to the moment it was first laid there. Iโ€™m sure Iโ€™m not the first to have had that thought and I know I wonโ€™t be the last. The plethora of books both fiction and non-fiction on the Romans are proof of our ongoing fascination with the Roman Empire – even if it does come at the detriment of our interest in any of the other periods that followed (seriously, Iโ€™ve been to several bookshops now and I canโ€™t find even one book on Mรฉridaโ€™s history between the fall of Rome and the Civil War).


Iโ€™ve more stories to relate, but I think Iโ€™ll split them up – Mรฉrida has more than one story to tell. As the Cรณrdoban scholar Mohammed Ar-Razi once put it:

No hay hombre en el mundo que cumplidamente puede contar las maravillas de Mรฉrida.

So I wonโ€™t try to do so in a single blog post – or several. Instead, like the Visigoths, the Muslims and nearly a hundred generations of Spaniards before me, Iโ€™ll take what I can and use its bricks and mortar as the foundations for my own stories. BB x

The Sun Returns

Andรฉn 13, Estaciรณn de Autobuses de Cรกceres. 13.29.

That last post was a bit lacklustre. I canโ€™t be at the top of my game all the time, but Iโ€™ll admit it is hard to write convincingly about my favourite topic – nature – when the rain kept me indoors for most of the day. I got out for a bit during the evening to have dinner at Mesรณn Troya, one of the restaurants in the square (usually a place to avoid in larger towns, but not so here), but beyond my short sortie beyond the castle walls, I didnโ€™t get very far yesterday. Instead, I contented myself with watching the stars from the hilltop and counting the towns and villages twinkling in the darkness of the great plains beyond: Monroy, Santa Marta de Magasca, Madroรฑera, and the brilliant glow of faraway Cรกceres.


Morning summoned a slow sunrise into a cloudless sky. If I had brought walking clothes, I would have set out across the llanos on foot – but Chelsea boots, a smart winter coat and bootcut Leviโ€™s jeans donโ€™t exactly make for the most comfortable long-distance fare, so I erred on the side of caution and took a stroll into the berrocal – the rocky hill country south of Trujillo.


Idly, I set my sights on a restored 17th century bridge some five kilometres or so from town, but I was quite happy to wander aimlessly if the path presented any interesting forks.

My working life is so full of tasks that require forethought and planning that itโ€™s nothing short of liberation itself to have that kind of absolute freedom that I crave: the freedom to do or not do, to turn back or to push on, to take this road or that, without any thought as to the consequences (beyond the need to get back in time for the bus). A freedom that becomes maddening when itโ€™s taken away from me, like it was in Jordan, all those years ago. Itโ€™s a hardwired philosophy that Iโ€™ve become increasingly aware of as Iโ€™ve grown older, bleeding into my views on speech, movement and identity – and massively at odds with most of my generation.

Perhaps itโ€™s an inherited desire for freedom from my Spanish side: I do have family ties to Andalucรญa, a region that once made a surprisingly successful bid for anarchy, and my great-grandparents quite literally put their lives on the line to make a stand for freedom of thought under Francoโ€™s fascist regime.

Or perhaps thatโ€™s just wishful thinking. Either way, itโ€™s hard to deny just how important that sense of total freedom is to me. Maybe Iโ€™m more like the Americans than I thought.


I didnโ€™t make it as far as the bridge. The full day of rain from the day before had done more than dampen the sandy soil and form puddles and pools in the road. It had also swollen the Arroyo Bajohondo to the size of a small river. It didnโ€™t look particularly bajo or hondo, but I didnโ€™t trust the stability of the soil underfoot and didnโ€™t fancy making way to Mรฉrida with soaking jeans up to my knees for the sake of a tiny bridge, so I turned about and returned the way I had come.


Without a car at my disposal, I couldnโ€™t make it out onto the plains, home to Trujilloโ€™s more emblematic species (bustards, sandgrouse and stone curlews), but the berrocal was teeming with wonders of its own. Hoopoes, shrikes and stonechats watched my coming and going from the rungs of rusting farming stations, while woodlarks and skylarks ran this way and that along the stone walls that marked the boundaries of cattle stalls along the way. A flock of Iberian magpies kept me company on the way back, their jaunty black caps almost shining in the sunlight, and I nearly missed a lonely lapwing sitting in one of the fields – a curiously English sight in far-flung Extremadura – before it took off on powerful, bouncing wingbeats.

Speaking of powerful wingbeats, I was practically clipped on my way down to the arroyo by three hulking shapes that flew overhead. I clocked one as a griffon – there are few silhouettes I know better – but I had a feeling the other two might have been black vultures – something about their colossal size and the heaviness of their beaks. They seemed to have disappeared by the time I turned the corner in pursuit, which is hard to imagine for creatures with a wingspan of around 270cm.

A change in perspective always helps, however. I found all three on my way back, sunning themselves on a granite boulder not too far from where Iโ€™d first seen them. I suppose Iโ€™d have had my back to them on the way down. And what an impressive sight they are! Hulking great things, even if they were some way off.


Even with the full day of rain, Iโ€™ve scarcely had a moment out here where Iโ€™ve felt lost or alone. Spain works an incredibly potent magic upon me, whether it comes in the form of the music of its native language, pan con aceite y tomate, the immense blue skies of Castilla or the spectacular sight of its vultures, forever and always my favourite sight in the whole world.

I conveyed this jokingly to an old lady from Villafranca on the bus. She gripped my arm with a talon that the vultures might have envied and told me in no uncertain terms to โ€œbรบscate un trabajo aquรญโ€. It does feel like the universe is trying to help me to set things right and come back. But I have to get it right. I need this to work this time. So – fingers crossed.

If I could spend the rest of my life in the passing shadow of the vultures, Iโ€™d die a happy man. BB x

Washout

Palacio Santa Marta, Trujillo. 19.04.

It turns out the rain in Spain does indeed fall mainly on the plain. And when it does, it does so with a Biblical vengeance. I made it to my hotel in Trujillo with just seconds to spare when the heavens opened. Any hopes I might have harboured of exploring the cityโ€™s surrounding countryside were swiftly washed away, as the rain came down all afternoon, all through the night and long into the following morning.

This would be a real downer if Iโ€™d had plans. But my itinerary is an open book and Iโ€™m always happy to improvise – it is my preferred method of travel. So I enjoyed a late morning, a proper breakfast and the blissful quiet of one of Spainโ€™s most beautiful (if isolated) towns.


Trujillo sits atop a small granite ridge in a boulder-strewn corner of the Llanos de Cรกceres, a vast and featureless steppe that stretches between the Sierra de San Pedro in the west and the Ibor Mountains to the east. Thereโ€™s nothing like it in Western Europe. Youโ€™d have to go as far as the Puzsta in eastern Hungary to find anything close to its vastness. Lichen-covered granite boulders rise out of the earth like giantโ€™s teeth and the odd tree stands alone in the fields, but beyond that, itโ€™s like staring into the infinite.

Little wonder, then, that Hernรกn Cortรฉs and Francisco Pizarro – both native sons of this part of the world – set their sights on nothing less than the horizon – theyโ€™d had no choice but to do so since the day they were born.


Extremadura can be a desolate place in winter. It can be pretty desolate in summer, too, but there is a virgin beauty in its isolation. By avoiding the grasping arms of the hordes of tourists who have strangled much that remained of Old Spain into submission, Extremadura has managed to hold on to the embers of an ancient fire which exists only in the memory of those living among the tower blocks of the southern coast.

Perhaps thatโ€™s why itโ€™s often considered one of the main contenders for the Birdwatching Capital of Europe, since so many rare and otherwise elusive species still flock here in droves, taking advantage of our absence to go about their lives as their ancestors have done since before we came to this land.

You can see some of that without even leaving the motorway. Every winter, more than 75,000 common cranes travel from their breeding grounds in Northern Europe to this remote corner of the Iberian peninsula. They spend the colder months in the shade of the dehesas, feeding on acorns. Theyโ€™re a rather common sight if you look beneath the trees, and at over a metre in height, theyโ€™re hard to miss.


When I first came to Trujillo in the spring of 2016, I promptly fell in love with the place. It wouldnโ€™t be the first remote corner of Spain thatโ€™s stolen my heart – El Rocรญo and Hornachos are up there – and it wonโ€™t be the last. Itโ€™s found its way into my saga as the elected home of my hero, partly out of practicality and partly out of a sense of wish fulfilment on my part. Half of me wishes Iโ€™d been brave enough to flat out ask to be sent here for my second British Council placement back in 2017. It would have been a lottery, of course, but what would it have been like to live here, I wonder? Trujillo is a lot smaller than Villafranca de los Barros – and a lot more out of the way – but infinitely more scenic.


I managed a short reccie to the north of town, before the skies turned dark once again and I had to admit defeat and return to the hotel. The cobbled streets running down from the hilltop had become rivers in their own right. It wasnโ€™t yet siesta time, but nobody else was out and about. And with good reason!


From my vantage point on the second floor of the hotel, I can see out across the plaza and the rest of town. There isnโ€™t all that much to see, with the rain clouds obscuring most of the world from view, but when the sun is shining, you can see straight across to the pyramidal Sierra de Santa Cruz – and the town at its feet, curiously named Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Iโ€™m not altogether sure which came first).

If the weather had been kinder Iโ€™d have set out at first light and tried to reach the old Moorish settlement at its summitโ€ฆ but then, I havenโ€™t exactly come dressed for a hike. Perhaps itโ€™s for the best that I have had a day to take it easy in Trujillo.


Tomorrow is a new day. 0% chance of rain. I donโ€™t need to rush off anywhere, so I might go for a stroll after breakfast and try to soak up the countryside while Iโ€™m here. BB x

Seven Seconds in Madrid

Chocolaterรญa 1902, Calle de San Martรญn. Centro. 10.22.

Iโ€™m waiting in line to grab some churros con chocolate for breakfast at 1902, the same chocolaterรญa I drop in on every time Iโ€™m in Madrid. Itโ€™s not yet half past ten on a Sunday, so the interior is still pretty busy with the usual morning traffic. The handsome lady manning the takeaway stall bustles in and out of the booth to resupply for the family of three in front of me. My attention is drawn to three punters sitting by the window. Locals, surely – only a Spaniard would keep their winter coat and furs on inside when thereโ€™s even the slightest chance of a draft slipping in. After all, it is a bitingly cold 16ยฐC out there.

They look to be in their seventies, there or thereabouts. That means that the man on the right served his country for at least a year in the mili, before Aznar did away with national service in 2001 in a bid to win votes. It also means they probably remember very well what Madrid used to be like under Franco, before La Transiciรณn and La Mรณvida swept the city into the twentieth century like the rest of the European capitals.

Do they miss the way things were, perhaps? It must have been an altogether different place, back when the cityโ€™s demographics were primarily madrileรฑos de raรญces, before scores of regional migrants were drawn to the capital for work, followed by a larger tally of visitors from further corners of the world. Before Ale-Hops and Starbucks replaced the boarded-up shopfronts of local businesses. Before every sign and tannoy needed an English translation tacked on, to cater to a growing tourist class who were not expected to learn the language for their visit – another reminder of Spainโ€™s falling status on the world stage.

I do not regret the end of Francoโ€™s Spain – after all, itโ€™s because of him that my Spanish family was torn apart. But I do understand why some might look back fondly on a time when the world seemed a whole lot more familiar.


Librerรญa La Central, Calle del Postigo de San Martรญn. Callao. 10.36.

Further up the street toward Gran Vรญa, I pass La Central. Itโ€™s not yet open, and an Amerindian in marigolds and workersโ€™ blue pantalones laborales is sweeping the street in front of the door, which is open only just enough for a person of slender build to squeeze in untouched. Itโ€™s mostly confetti and spent chasquibumes that heโ€™s clearing away – there arenโ€™t nearly as many cigarette butts as there used to be.

A girl stands nearby, picking up some of the easier wrappers by hand. Sheโ€™s dressed like a passer-by, but thereโ€™s a familiarity to their easy interaction: she could be a relative, a friend, or a lover. Neither of them are wearing the white worm-like earbuds that seem to have encrusted the faces of so many of the cityโ€™s inhabitants, and that makes them stand out.

I bought four books in the nearby Casa del Libro (after nearly two hoursโ€™ decision) and it cost me around 70โ‚ฌ. Spain is often ranked as one of the least literate countries in Europe, with fewer than 9% of the country reading books on the regular. Statistically, thatโ€™s not all that far behind the UK, but thereโ€™s no escaping the fact that reading is a luxury activity in Spain. FBP (Fixed Book Price) might be a worthy attempt to level the playing field and prevent the market being swamped in Taylor Swift trash and cheap chick lit, but it does drive up the prices of everything as a result.

My great-grandfather dreamed of having his own library, and Iโ€™m doing pretty well at bringing that dream to fruition. But itโ€™s not a cheap enterprise in this country. I wonder how much traffic the man in marigolds sees.


Outside The Madrid Edition, Calle del Maestro Victoria. Centro. 12.55.

The queue for Doรฑa Manolitaโ€™s legendary lottery shop stretches all the way along Calle de Mesonero Romanos and away up Calle de la Abada and onto Gran Vรญa. The throng of hopefuls is a real mix: young and old, local and out-of-town, Spanish and French and American. El Gordo – Spainโ€™s Christmas lottery – is much more of an event in Spain than it is elsewhere in the world.

At the end of one crowd, another begins: a great mass of children and their parents waiting for the giant animatronic train and its attendant polar bears on the Cortylandia shopfront to come to life and sing, as it does every hour, on the hour (until 10pm, it seems – itโ€™s within earshot of my hostel room).

Two glamorous citizens standing apart from the hubbub seem to be above it all, watching the crowds come and go with unmoving eyes. One leads the conversation, the other listens, eyes skyward. Sometimes itโ€™s hard to see how the haughty, angular beauty of a youthful Spaniard finds its way into the compact, shrunken shape of its senior citizens, but every once in a while thereโ€™s a flash of that future in the expressions of its youngsters: that look of casual ennui would be right at home on the face of a woman three times her age, still dressed in expensive furs and commenting on the world going by.


Outside Heladerรญa Galia, Calle del Arenal. Puerta del Sol. 12.57.

A West African mantero plies his wares alone on the Arenal. They usually operate in groups – there being safety in numbers, I suppose – but this one seems to be his own agent. He has also upgraded his drawstring blanket to a couple of glassware boxes. While other mountebanks dressed as a gorilla, Eevee and Mickey Mouse try to fleece passing tourists of their loose change, he hawks a number of luminous splat toys, which he promotes by blowing into a bird whistle and hurling his devices onto the flat surface of the box, where they slowly revert to their original shape.

Itโ€™s hardly worthy of a momentโ€™s notice to most of the adults passing by, but itโ€™s the children heโ€™s after. One girl is absolutely entranced and convinces her mother to buy one – no, two, as they will have to get one for her brother.

It canโ€™t be an easy job, hawking cheap goods on the street, but from my casual observations, these manteros do seem to have a fairly good hit-rate when it comes to a quick sale.


Plaza de Isabel II, Puerta del Sol. 12.59.

Before it became synonymous with one of C.J. Sansomโ€™s greatest works, winter in Madrid always meant roast chestnuts. These warm, smoking stalls are as much in evidence now as they ever where, though they now often come with the modern niceties of a wireless card machine and an Aquarius-bearing fridge. Here, like everywhere else, the signs are written twice: once in Spanish and once again in inglis. The point I try to make in the classroom about the usefulness of this or that topic for traveling is increasingly redundant in the face of the relentless march of the English language.

The girl with the pearl earring isnโ€™t as heavily dressed for the chill as the other madrileรฑos in the street – but then, she is standing in front of a roasting dish all morning. She looks bored. The telltale rounded edges of a smartwatch bulges beneath the tight elastic of a sanitary glove on her right hand, and a swish handbag – presumably hers – sits nestled in an alcove behind her, so the chestnut business must be doing a reasonably good trade. I havenโ€™t seen as many people tucking into the delicacy as I have in previous years, but then, it really isnโ€™t quite that cold. Not yet. Not until the peaks of the Sierra de Guadarrama are covered in snow and the north wind blows chill across the plain and into the capital.

Sheโ€™s cute – in a genuine, homely sort of way. Thereโ€™s a natural beauty to people here. Not as many piercings, lip fillers, unconventional hairdos or fake tans. I donโ€™t know why we go in for that so much in England. I already miss this place, and Iโ€™ve only just arrived.


Jardines de Lepanto, Plaza de Oriente. 13.26.

Sitting between the marble statues of the Asturian kings Iรฑigo Arista and Alfonso I is an exceedingly odd fellow. Like many of the cityโ€™s inhabitants, he is dressed in furs for the cold, but the similarities stop there. If the tassels on his black leather buckskins werenโ€™t a metallic shade of blue, he might be a fur trapper from the Old West lost in time.

No – wrong continent. His regal nose, his dark, hooded eyes and the salt-and-pepper beard emerging in a neat diamond from his black headwarmer gives him the look of an Arab trader. A wise man, perhaps. Itโ€™s that time of year.

A curious assortment of symbols hang by threads across his naked torso: the Tau cross, an ivory pawn, a set of small keys and a card cut-out of the words โ€œHo-Hoโ€ in gold letters that looks like it came out of a Christmas cracker. A fold-up umbrella pokes out of the smart yellow satchel at his side and there is a roll mat strapped to his waist. If he is a tramp, as his demeanour implies, he is a wealthy one.

Today the city of full of people in fancy dress. Ecuadoreans in tasselled hats and masks. Mountebanks in oversized costumes. Zambomberos in black and white and red. But he belongs to none of these clans.

When I return from watching the first of the zambomberos parade past, he has disappeared. I do not see him again.


Palacio Real, Plaza de Oriente. 14.36.

The fiesta zambombera is over. The crowded musicians begin to disperse, and with them, so too the clouds, bathing the Jardines Reales in warm winter sunlight. A modern dance troupe takes up where the traditionalists left off, showing that movement is as much a part of this countryโ€™s soul as its music. Still dressed in their folklore finery, the folcloristas return to their groups and prepare to depart. One huddle near the dance troupe stops to take a selfie. The red banner of Castilla flutters in the wind and the little cymbals in the tambourine shudder for a moment.

I must be a fool to have traded my life out here for England. So help me God, I will find my way back out here. I have to. Itโ€™s the only way Iโ€™ll ever assuage this restless heart of mine. BB x


Where thereโ€™s Light, thereโ€™s Hope

Room 402, TOC Hostel Madrid. 17.32.

It is categorically impossible to be down at heart in Madrid. Whatever my thoughts and feelings were, they were altogether altered the moment my feet were back on Spanish soil as I left the plane at Barajas last night. Itโ€™s not as though I need reminding that Spain is always the answer to my lonely heart, but it is good to know that its medicine is none the weaker for every visit – especially as this is my *fourth* visit this year (though if you count my sorties to and from the Canaries and Gibraltar, it would be my sixth). Anyone would have thought I had an itch that needed scratchingโ€ฆ


Ah, Madrid. Like the girl next door in every American romcom, I have come to regret dismissing you so lightly when first we met, now that you have captured my heart. There is something undeniably homely about La Capital, which neither London nor Paris nor Berlin can match. Even now, bustling as it always is in the run-up to Christmas, it still feels more like a large town than a capital city.

From my vantage point in the hostel, overlooking the glittering Calle del Arenal, the hubbub below is a merry melange of conversation, villancicos, far-off snatches of song and the intermittent underground rumble of the metro. The near-constant snapping of chasquibumes (bang snaps) makes the city sound like a crackling fire.

I donโ€™t say this often, but here is a city I wouldnโ€™t mind living in.


Merry-go-rounds, ice rinks and various Christmas-themed stalls have been set up in the various squares and open spaces throughout the city. Traditionally, itโ€™s the Reyes Magos (the Three Wise Men) who bring children presents in Spain – which has always struck me as a much more logical excuse to celebrate the giving of gifts – but that doesnโ€™t seem to have stopped the Spaniards from starting the festivities several weeks prior. And why not? Any excuse for a celebration will do.


By far the brightest lights can be found on the walls of Callaoโ€™s Corte Inglรฉs, which draws a constant stream of shoppers into the night (it was still heaving at half past nine when I passed by en route to the hostel last night). Wherever thereโ€™s a crowd, thereโ€™s usually a ragtag bunch of pedlars clinging remora-like to its underbelly. Sure enough, I found three manteros hawking the usual array of glasses, handbags and Yamine Lamal shirts outside the main entrance, the strings of their cloth blankets twitching in their nervous hands at every distant blast of a police car. Their location of choice – beneath the three wise men – seemed almost poetic.

I donโ€™t suppose the Baby Jesus would have had any more call for a Barcelona tee-shirt than he did for frankincense. Neither, it seems, did the madrileรฑos. But whoโ€™s to say that these three wise men didnโ€™t follow a star of sorts to Europe?


Down the street in the Puerta del Sol, the Real Casa de Correos is lit up like an advent calendar – though in its technicolour array it looks more like a dollhouse – and the usual conical tree of lights stands between Carlos IIIโ€™s smug smile and the oso y madroรฑo statue on the other side of the square.

Could you call La Puerta del Sol a square? It functions like one, more so than the nearby Plaza Mayor (which really is a square) but itโ€™s really more of a semicircle – a giant protractor radiating in multiple directions from Kilรณmetro Cero at the feet of the Casa de Correos. At least, it would be, if the centre of the semicircle were just a few yards to the left.


Iโ€™m only here for a couple of nights. Extremadura is calling. It has been too long since I last laid eyes on the corner of Spain that well and truly stole my heart all those years ago, and since then, itโ€™s been nothing more than a beautiful word on my lips. Iโ€™ve already had my fair share of nostalgia trips this year to Finisterre, Gibraltar and El Rocรญo, but one more wonโ€™t hurt. Holidays are for healing, and thatโ€™s exactly what I intend to do. BB x

The Jolly Company

Gate 23, Bristol Airport. 16.20.

I canโ€™t remember the last time I flew Ryanair. Itโ€™s definitely pre-Covid, but it might be even as far back as 2017, which isnโ€™t that far off a decade ago. If memory serves, that last flight under the sign of Brian Boruโ€™s harp was so dreadfully delayed out of Toulouse that my flatmate had to pick me up well after midnight from Sevilla Santa Justa airport – back when Sevilla was a conduit rather than a destination, nearly a lifetime ago.

But, at ยฃ15 for a flight to Madrid, I could hardly say no. It isnโ€™t often that I can escape to Spain for less than it costs me to get to the airport. My grandfatherโ€™s country has become something of an elixir of late, and one upon which I have become heavily reliantโ€ฆ So here I am, once again, hightailing it out of the country less than twenty-four hours after the end of term, in search of peace, joy and healing – and three blissfully Teams-free weeks.


The train up from Taunton was absolutely packed with revellers, cackling and guffawing and generally reeking of booze, weed or the cheap, sickly stink of vape smoke. A new party seemed to jump on board at every station en route to Bristol, before the 13.18 stopped in its tracks at Weston-super-Mare and, at a signal from the station manager, disgorged the contents of its swollen stomach onto a smaller Great Western train on the opposite platform.

I tried to zone out with a copy of Samantha Harveyโ€™s The Western Wind which I had swiped off my bookshelf before I left – a hasty decision, admittedly, as I donโ€™t tend to return the books I take on holiday, so it needed to be fiction. I got about a hundred pages in before losing interest in the plot when I realised it was marching backwards in time. Iโ€™m not the easiest to please when it comes to fiction, but I do tend to blanch pretty quickly at any kind of narrative structure that deviates from a logical chronology.

Hereโ€™s hoping my fallback, S.J. Deasโ€™ The Royalist, is a little easier to read. Failing that, Iโ€™ve downloaded the audiobook for Dune – and thereโ€™s always Madridโ€™s Casa del Libro.


Itโ€™s going to be a rather full flight. Thereโ€™s a large and boisterous throng now gathered here at Gate 23, most of them under the age of twenty. Either Bristolโ€™s entire population of Spaniards are riding this flight home, or several school trips are coming back for Christmas (though I canโ€™t see any teachers). Either way, itโ€™s a good thing Iโ€™ve packed light, as I donโ€™t imagine thereโ€™s going to be much room on the plane.


They may be noisy, but their language is a lot sweeter on the ear than the F-bomb-littered slurring speech of the revellers on the train. The older I get, the more I feel the sands of time slipping through my fingers. Destiny is calling me back to Spain – I must not turn my head from her. I cannot. BB x