Home again, Sunday, 10th December, 2023
In Llanes on Monday all wrapped up because of the wind. Notice little Pippa's ears flapping hahaha. |
Good morning everyone.
Well we've been and gone to Asturias now and have been home since Wednesday. We would have stayed longer except that we had guests arriving on Thursday for the long bank holiday weekend. The 6th December is Constitution Day and the 8th is the Immaculate Conception. Some people take the whole or part of the week off.
It is 45 years since the new Spanish Constitution was approved in a national referendum in 1978. I was 21 then and spending a year in Madrid as part of my degree in Hispanic Studies at Nottingham University. I remember the fervour surrounding the election which was one of the biggest steps to democracy after the death of Franco in 1975. The most extraordinary thing about the 1978 Constitution is that it was put together by seven deputies from different political parties. They are known as the fathers of the constitution. Only two of them, Miguel Herrero y Rodríguez de Miñón and Miguel Roca are still alive. They did a great job which would most probably be impossible in this day and age, given the state of the political division of the country. The fathers of the Constitution would be very alarmed to know that members of the far right Catalan separatist party, Junts, led by fugitive Puigdemont, and members of the ruling socialist party, PSOE, met this week in Geneva for "talks". These talks are part of the conditions imposed by Puigdemont in exchange for his parties' votes allowing Pedro Sánchez to be invested Prime Minister again. The most controversial condition was an amnesty for all people prosecuted for their involvement in the illegal Catalan separatist movement since 2012. Puigdemont, is Sánchez' political "king maker" but he is also his hangman or could be as he will be watching the government's every move, a government that relies on his support. Apart from the amnesty, Puigdemont wants to hold a referendum for Catalan independence, something the Spanish constitution of 1978 does not contemplate. To add insult to injury, these talks which will be ongoing, are to be supervised by a supposed independent third party and in a country outside Spain. The person chosen is a diplomat from El Salvador of all places. I doubt Francisco Galindo Vélez, can save Spain! This has further divided the country and there have been mass demonstrations again this week.
We left for Asturias last Sunday on a crisp and sunny day. We were and still are recovering from our various cold and flu like viruses but had to go. We didn't go for pleasure but to paint part of the entrance and lounge before our guests arrived. The insurance company people had broken the wall, unnecessarily, last September because of a small leak and we were left to clear up the mess.
The wall the insurance people broke and shouldn't have |
We found a man to do it but we gave him the wrong colour paint. The original colour is light cream and the paint we gave him was yellow which we didn't realise at the time. He later sent me a photo of the "job done".
Wrong colour paint |
For God's sake, why didn't he tell us the colour was wrong before he painted I ask myself? The only reason we went this week was to repair the damage. The problem would be finding the right colour paint.
The journey was smooth and we only stopped to eat our sandwiches somewhere on the way. We arrived around 4.30 pm and the first thing we saw upon entering the house was the botched paint job. I didn't let it get me down and got on with unpacking and settling in. Loli, the neighbour who looks after the house, had put the heating on for us so the house was warmish. The system is electric which is very expensive but never really heats up the house properly. Thankfully the climate in that part of the country is quite mild. Eladio also put on the range cooker with some of the logs from the dwindling pile of wood in the garage and at least the kitchen was cozy. When I was done, I lay down on the sofa in the lounge to watch more of "Cuéntame" with Pippa at my side. I could hear a noise from the hall so got up to see what is was. I was amazed to see Eladio painting the yellow part of the wall. He had found the right paint colour which was hidden somewhere in the cupboard under the stairs. We had bought it last year to paint the entrance when a huge piece of furniture fell. That was the paint Eladio thought he had given to the builder Ramón! Thankfully though we now had the right paint and the job we had come to do was over as soon as we arrived.
Thus on Monday we had no tasks, just time for ourselves. I was up at around 8.30 after interrupted sleep owing to my damn cough. As usual I read the news. Top of the list are the renewed attacks on Gaza by Israel. The IDF is back with a vengeance. Palestinians had been warned to go south while Israel bombed the north but now they seem to be bombing everywhere and Palestinians have no place to find refuge. The situation is dire. The UN wants an humanitarian ceasefire which, unsurpisingly, was vetoed by the US.
I was happier reading about this year's Oxford University Press' word of the year. It is "rizz", a word I had never heard of. Have you? It is slang for romantic appeal and charm and is used a lot by young people, mostly on internet. The word most likely derives from charisma. So do you have "rizz"? The shortlisted words were pretty new to me as I have lived outside the UK for over 40 years and my vocab has remained in the 80's hahaha. The shortlisted words are: "beige flag" (someone or something boring), "situationship" (non formal romantic relationship), "parasocial" (a one sided relationship between a person and someone they do not know), "heat dome" (hot air; weather related), "swiftie" ( a fan of singer Taylor Swift who I have heard of but know nothing about), "prompt" (an instruction using AI - I suppose an instruction given to Chat GPT or similar). Last and least is "de-influencing" which refers to the opposite of influencing on social media. This list of words would have been most unfamiliar to people of my generation and older. You learn something new everyday don't you?
But we weren't thinking about the war against Hamas on Monday morning or any other news really. I was happy to be back at our house in Asturias. Here is Eladio getting into our old Volvo. I got it from Nokia when I left the company in 2006 and it must be about 22 years old but it is still going strong hahahaha.
Getting into our old Volvo to drive to Llanes on Monday |
On our way back we did some shopping in Posada, mostly for house provisions - you know "beige flag" stuff, like washing detergent, loo roll, etc. I made a simple lunch of pork sirloin with vegetables cooked in olive oil and garlic - so Spanish.
Tuesday was to be our last full day in Asturias and again we were free to do what we felt like. Tuesday too was the 4th anniversary of the death of my dearest Spanish friend Fátima. We met at Motorola in about 1991 and became close friends.
With my dearest friend Fátima at the Paris Roubaix cycling race in 1993, a photo I love of the two of us having fun together. |
We then went on to work together for Nokia and were even neighbours. So close were we that we were known by some people as "Pin and Pon". Oh dear Fátima, how I miss you in my life. I don't have another "best friend" in Spain so her loss for me was very big. We were like sisters and I think of her very often wishing I could share something with her. Whatever news I had, be it good or bad, I always shared it with my friend and that's one of the things I miss most about her loss.
Fátima would have loved coming with us to Asturias and she would have loved the pretty town of Llanes. That's where we went again on Tuesday, mostly because it was market day. I love parking by the Sablón beach and walking through the old walls of the city and its old streets, like this one where I got Eladio to pose.
Walking the streets of Llanes |
Coffee in Llanes on Tuesday morning |
Eladio buying tickets in Llanes for this year's El Gordo Christmas lottery draw |
Playa de Toró just outside Llanes - as seen on Tuesday morning this week in Asturias |
Fabada for lunch in Llanes on Tuesday |
Juliet and Elliot in Montrondo on Wednesday |
The Lieven family estate in Voskresensk near Moscow |
My Christmas crackers ordered from the British Corner Shop online which arrived this week. |
Although I didn't feel like it, I decided that on Friday we just had to put up the Christmas decorations. It's a task we used to do with the girls when they were small and we always did it to the sound of English Christmas carols. Gone are those days and now it is just Eladio and I who do it together. After our walk, something else I insisted on as I just had to get off my back****, my husband brought up the huge cardboard box with all the decorations as well as our rather old and forlorn imitation tree. Here he is about to start the task.
Starting on the Christmas decorations |
Some of our Christmas decorations |
Friday was a sunny day and so was yesterday, Saturday. We had things to do that morning. Oh, how I love our morning errands together. We went out to buy lots of batteries for some of my Christmas decorations and toys - I am such a child at heart. We also got more lottery tickets and sent one to Loli in Asturias. We shall also be giving one each to Suzy and Oli. It's a big custom here to give or share lottery tickets with family and friends. Here is Eladio posting Loli's.
Eladio posting a card with a lottery ticket for Loli yesterday in Boadilla. |
Elliot and Juliet with their cousins in Montrondo this week |
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