As I write, Spain, the UK and the rest of Europe are trying to deal with the Corona virus, COVID-19.
I hope Valencia gets well soon. I hope Spain gets well soon. I hope Europe gets well soon*.
My letting agent tells me that our Romanian tenants are very, very happy with our Valencia apartment. So much so, that they offered to buy it a few weeks ago. My reply was a polite “no”, but it’s good to know that they like where they are.
With Spain on lockdown, they will need to like where they are. Under state of emergency laws that allow residents to leave their homes for essential trips only, one of them can go to the supermercado or the farmacia. Once a day.
I am concerned for our
tenants. The approach that our letting agents adopt is that they are guests to
be cared for, who should enjoy our hospitality. I value this approach. I hope
they’re OK.
Just to be clear, this is not The Serra Calderona. |
The sun comes round to
bless our balcony with warmth and light by late morning, and clouds rather than
the virus will decide if we enjoy that. With sun at this time of year, it will
be warm on the balcony by 1pm. Warm enough for reading, eating and perhaps a
siesta.
I know that our tenants
have work to occupy them. The broadband was upgraded to accommodate the demands
of their profession. The remote IT worker. The “digital nomad”. Have laptop,
will travel.
But I know that one of the
lifestyle elements that these “digital nomads” yearn for is freedom. Open
borders. The option to move whenever the mood takes them. Freedom of
movement**.
Now they can’t have it. A
microscopic thing that makes people ill has come and smothered their
expectations.
I haven’t met our tenants,
but I’m going to take an educated guess about how they’re feeling right now:
They felt settled and happy
in Spain, in Valencia, and in our apartment, and they wanted to buy a place to
stay. But now, they’re not allowed to move around Spain/Europe/the world, and
they’ll have an irresistible urge to take flight once again.
“Once you have traveled, the voyage never ends, but is played out over and over again in the quietest chambers. The mind can never break off from the journey.”
I hope they’re OK.
“Once you have traveled, the voyage never ends, but is played out over and over again in the quietest chambers. The mind can never break off from the journey.”
Pat Conroy
I hope they’re OK.
The Banco de Valencia in the heart of the city. |
There should be a golf trip to Mijas/Fuengirola in late May, but this is now unlikely. ¿A quiĆ©n le importa? some of you might say!
But mostly I miss Valencia.
So many of my social media feeds are dominated by Valencia, Valencian places and Valencian people, that I can never get away from reminders of how much I want to be there. Las Fallas was halted as it was just getting going. For those not acquainted with Las Fallas, its importance as a festival in the eyes of many Valencians is enormous. To have it abandoned (postponed?) a few days before the March 19th climax is akin to sitting the kids down on the evening of December 22nd, and telling them that Christmas won't be happening.
The Valencians are all confined in their apartments. They cannot see their friends. The visitors cannot visit. The amazing bars and restaurants are closed, and their owners and staff will have their own challenges to face. Some won’t be able to survive those challenges.
El Micalet from Calle Corretgeria. We will never take such sights for granted after this. |
On our next visit (whenever this may be) we’ll pass
restaurants, bars and shops permanently closed. The same might go for
attractions and monuments that have gone without income for weeks or months. These
places will have been more than places of employment, more than places of
business and commerce… and they will be gone, and little bits of the soul of
the city may be gone with them.
Nobody is really to blame, but it looks bleak from
where I am right now. I have some understanding of how Valencians view life,
and how determined they are to live it! This lockdown will be beyond
claustrophobia.
The city has suffered before, and now many will have
hardship again. I hope they can draw strength from those past experiences.
My most fervent hope is that I can write later in the
year about my first hand experiences of how the city and the people are
recovering from this.
For now… buena suerte Valencia. Estoy pensando en ti.
*That’s geographical Europe.
**Don’t start me on that one.
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