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Arguing about all sorts: the third year of our Spanish adventure

This account of our life in Spain is loosely based on true events although names and identifying details have been changed to protect the privacy of individuals. I have tried to recreate events, locales and conversations from my memories and from my diaries of the time. I may have also changed identifying characteristics and details of individuals such as appearance, nationality or occupations and characters are often an amalgam of different people that I met.

Concluding the third year of our Spanish adventure.
Sunday, September 7, 2014 @ 3:35 PM

As usual then it was a mad race to get all our affairs in Spain organised before beginning the long road journey back to Wales. We had to arrive by the 30th of June as this was when we had loads of appointments and issues to resolve when students moved out of our rental houses and new ones moved in on the 1st of July. And because the children played up so much in the car when we drove long distance, we always broke up the journey a lot and made a holiday of it. 
We would drive to somewhere near Madrid or Valencia and stay in a hostel. Then it would be up to the border of Spain and France and another overnight stay. After the third day of driving we would stop for a few days in France on a camp site and have a mini-holiday. Then it was another day up through France and another two or three night stay and finally the home trek via the ferry from Caen or St Malo. 
We were of course worried that the casa wouldn't be finished in time for the tourists, just as we'd been worried two years earlier that the cortijo summer rentals would go awry. We'd soon find out when we started getting the first bit of feedback. 
There always seemed to be something to worry about. I found life such a struggle. Maybe my feelings were justified. I'd moved country with two small children and I'd experienced a series of disappointments in my new setting - including dealing with liars, cheats, thieves and flakes.
It did at least seem now, though, at the end of my third year, as though things were looking up. The house was nearly finished and was let out for the summer, so there would now be money coming into the bank account for a change and I'd no longer have to devote my days to liaising with builders and buying materials. My father had died only six months earlier as well and I'd handled it pretty well - no nervous breakdown. As for the children; they had friends in their new village school and they were both top of their classes. The business in the UK was ticking over - thriving even with property prices forever on the increase (although we often faced a lot of stress with tenants from hell). Surely we were over the worst and could now relax?


Postscript:
You may now have to wait some time until I prepare the next episode of our Spanish 'adventure' for my adoring public. Frankly, I've got to be in the mood to revisit some of this crap. It's even more tricky now that I'm facing another crisis (which I won't be telling you about; it's bloody astonishing sometimes what life can throw at you).
I'm also trying to think positively - which dwelling on a difficult past isn't that conducive to. Who knows? I may abandon this story altogether. I've often questioned the point in writing and publishing books. Sometimes hardly anyone reads them  and even if millions read them, who cares? Those millions of people don't matter to me. Only a few people really matter to me. What is all this searching for public recognition and validation? We writers are as desperate as celebrities to be popular, have people praise us etc. To care so much what strangers think... 
And what is their praise? A puff of smoke. Gone in a flash. What's the point of anything in fact? 
I shall end with some of my favourite lines from Shakespeare for you to savour on this September afternoon on which as you can see I'm feeling thoroughly depressed:


Macbeth:
To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.

Macbeth Act 5, scene 5, 19–28

 

To see our current properties for rent take a look at the following. There is plenty of availability from September onwards at DISCOUNTED rates: 

http://www.homeaway.co.uk/p86636

And also another of our completed projects:

http://www.homeaway.co.uk/p475271

 



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5 Comments


dontim said:
Saturday, September 13, 2014 @ 7:59 AM

Hello Eggcup,

I am still with you. I hope you can see your way through life's latest problems to raise your spirits and continue writing your story.

Tim


dontim said:
Saturday, September 13, 2014 @ 8:01 AM

Lovely quote from Macbeth, by the way. It is so true but then, so what? You just have to take each day as it comes and take pleasure in whatever life offers.


eggcup said:
Saturday, September 13, 2014 @ 8:14 AM

Thanks dontim. Yes, I still get through each day and there are lots of good things in every day. Also, none of us go through life without ups and downs and twists and turns. Thanks for the kind words.


fazeress said:
Saturday, October 4, 2014 @ 10:23 PM

Oh Eggie, sorry you're so down and sorry you're struggling to re visit the past pains. I hope you can continue, it must surely help in the long run.
I hope you can get through this period and onto the next. Things can on,y get better 😊x


Finisterre said:
Monday, September 21, 2015 @ 12:02 PM

Sorry to hear you were feeling down, Eggcup. I hope things are looking up a bit. I think you've got a lot to feel proud of and happy about, even though we all have these days where everything just seems thoroughly crappy.

I always get the impression you enjoy the writing - it's a cathartic process and also, like anything else one does well, it's done to flex those muscles and feel the joy of using your capabilities. Maybe wait till you feel like that again to tackle the difficult stuff. And you're right - maybe you never will, and there's nowt wrong with that. Much as we all enjoy reading it. ;-)


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