Home's been a little slow so far. It seems nothing has changed. This is a good thing, in some ways, but it also exemplifies a static lifestyle which is quite different than the one I've been living for the past year. I'm eager to get my summer going, but before I get too far into this next adventure, I'd like to reflect on the last month, which, filled to the brim, was exhausting and perfect.
Before spring break, I hadn't left Madrid since arriving. The last month or of my Spanish vida was essentially the antithesis of that. Every day in Spain was a special one, each an improvement on the previous. My weekends, though, were for the most part spent away from my host-country. The trips were meant to be somewhat spread out for a nice balance of time both in and out of España, la puta madre, but a certain somebody, the often very calm and collected but occasionally disruptive and ill-tempered, Mr. Eyjafjallajökull, had different plans in mind.
The volcano erupted about mid-week as Thursday the 15th of April approached, in which Matt, Ricky and I were scheduled to fly out on our long-awaited journey to Amsterdam. I didn't think too much about the potential consequences of the eruption, but when, on the morning of the 15th, I read on Iberia's website that all flights out of Spain were cancelled, I was devastated. I had been so very pumped to go, all set with a list of parks, museums, coffee shops, tulip markets, etc. to see, and I was all of a sudden left with an unrelenting, helpless situation. There was simply nothing we could do to get to Amsterdam, or anywhere. It was a frustrating morning, but, luckily, my intuitive mother did me a huge favor and contacted the airline for me and was able to maneuver a switcheroo for two weekends later. Matt and Ricky likewise switched their flights, so, presto, another weekend in Madrid was in order. It was a bit of a slap in the face that those who had left a day earlier were so unfortunately stranded in Paris, London, Munich etc., but it turned out that many of them had to catch über-long bus-rides back to Spain in the end. So it all worked out, but, like I say, it certainly made the last few weeks much more jam-packed.