Mom and Dad visit! Met them in the airport in Barcelona (in different terminals, almost didn´t find them because we were all following the classic “stay where you are and it´ll be easier to be found” trick…. Luckily, they ended up calling me). I found them (with Cadbury crème eggs in tow, my one request for something from home, and we took a bus to the city centre where mom slipped on a puddle with her suitcase wheeling along. After that minor trauma, we took the train into Sant Cugat, where Dad’s cousin (Octavio) lives. Everyone was excited and nervous to see Dad’s aunt, but when we arrived, she wasn’t there… We walked around Sant Cugat and casually interrupted a wedding at the cathedral, then headed back to Octavio’s place for lunch. It was fabulous and Octavio told some very enlightening and downright interesting stories about dad’s family and Moçambique. We went into the city after that and embarked on our paella-fest (mom and dad actually came so we could do a paella pilgrimage). We walked through the Ramblas to the
The next dayñ, we went to church at the Cathedral in Sant Cugat and sat through a mass that was being said in catalán so I didn’t even understand it, but I’m pretty sure we got the gist of what was going on. We went into
We flew into
The next day I had class and the elders had bus trips. I met up with them at their hotel after class, and they were exhausted and flustered, definitely proud of the steps they logged on their pedometers (matching pedometers… can you say “adorable”?!). We then went for tapas for dinner and got some chocolate con churros for dessert at the famous San Ginés Chocolatería,ñ which we all gobbled up and “enjoyed,” only to reveal to each other later that they weren’t really that good. That was the night I crashed in their hostel bed with them, which I would prefer not to talk about, and yes, the Plans, Trains and Automobiles joke about a hand being between two pillows WAS thrown around.
Next day, I had class, then my two closest friends here and I met up with the rents at the hotel, we had some drinks and then went for Indian with Jim and Sheils! Mom asked my friend from
We had a big day ahead of us the next day. I met the gang at El Escorial, which is about an hour trainride from where I live. They had rented a car. El Escorial is a fabulous building, former royal residence with so much art. Also, this is where we started ordering the menu turistico, which is 2 or 3 courses, dessert and drinks for a fixed price around 8-10euros. Pretty good. We drove to Ávila from El Escorial. It was awesome, and the weather just got nicer and nicer throughout the trip. We ate their traditional sugary treat, the yema (which is just an egg yolk that has absorbed so much sugar that it is a gooey ball). We toured St. Teresa of Ávila’s birth home, which has been converted to a Church, and we even saw a relic of St. Teresa’s ring finger, which is preserved in the shop nextdoor to the church. We then went to church in the St. Thomas Aquinas church where the Catholic Kings (Isabel and Ferdinand) had a palace.
The drive from there to
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