A quick note before we dive in: I hope all of you currently affected by snow, ICE, power outages or other menacing phenomena are safe and well! Reading the news from afar it seems like quite a lot is going on at the moment.
Anyway. So Hasta Luego is a phrase they use all the time in Spain to say goodbye. It means roughly "see you later." (Literally: "until then/later.") But the Spanish will use it for goodbyes even when it's unlikely you will ever see them again. It just sounds nicer: like they're already looking forward to the next time they'll get to share your delightful company, even if they are a taxi driver who just took you to the airport.
As it happens, my wife and I are on the cusp of needing to say a whole lot of "Hasta Luegos" to people we really care about. But we're not exactly sure when Luego will be. It could be a long time from now.
Facing hard goodbyes is wrenching, and we hate it. But we're mature adults, so we know exactly how to handle it:
We're just pretending it's not actually happening.
Anyone got any better ideas? How do you all cope when you become fond of people, and then end up living very very far away from them? My wife and I have been doing various versions of this for our entire 35 years together, so you'd think we'd be better at it by now.
So What's With All the "See You Later's?"
If you're not a regular reader, the deal is that we've been living half-time in Valencia, Spain for roughly the last four years. After Trump got elected the first time, we decided we wanted to work up a Plan B for the future in case something unthinkable like that ever happened again. Well, guess what? All of a sudden Plan B started seeming like it could end up being Plan A.
But there was no need to choose right away, and we loved having these two very different lives.
Now though, we've reached a point, primarily for medical reasons but others as well, where the frequent back-and-forth is just not working. We need to choose one country to live in, and one to visit every now and then. (And yes, we know we are incredibly fortunate to have these options).
In our opinion, Spain is a much better country than the U.S. in so many important ways. Yet now that we are forced to choose, it looks like we are choosing the U.S. instead.
Our friends here think we are insane, and they are right. The United States is currently at the mercy of a narcicisstic madman with the intelligence of a rotting turnip; innocent protesters are being shot in the streets; and those in charge seem intent on destroying everything that was ever good about our country. While there is spirited resistance in some quarters, the cowardly capitulation of the mainstream press, the legislative branch, the supreme court, business leaders, and half the population too busy posing for instagram pictures to notice what is happening, all give us grave doubts about the country's future.
And yet: for us, America is home, and Spain is not. Our reasons for feeling this way are complicated and intellectually indefensible. (More on this in a future post. Not because you're going to want to read about it, but because I'm going to want to write about it).
So we are pinning our hopes on an ever-growing resistance movement, a big blue wave in the midterms, and some sort of semblance of sanity returning.
The plan is to leave Valencia in a couple of weeks. And we're not sure when we will return. However, we're not going so far as to sell our flat and abandon our hard-won Spanish resident visa. We'd still like to hold on to Plan B as long as we can.
Further complicating things, we will also be moving from the enchanting Provincetown, Massachusetts, to the Hillcrest neighborhood of San Diego, California. They are both awesome places to live, but one has Winter, and the other does not. Also one is close to everything we need, and the other is located at the Far Remote End of the World. With our medical needs and weather wimpiness, it's not a practical place to spend our last couple of decades.
Problem is, we can't figure out how to take all of the incredibly wonderful people we've become close to in both Valencia and Provincetown to San Diego with us! Last we checked, kidnapping was still a felony, plus, checking so much extra luggage with our friends stuffed inside would be quite costly.
So it looks like we have a double set of really tough "hasta luegos" coming up.
We try to console ourselves with a few things:In this modern age, it's much easier to keep in touch with distant friends and relatives. We've done this before: up and moved, and still stayed close. We text friends and family all the time. And if there was one thing the pandemic was good for, it taught us that video calls can feel almost like "real life." You just have to actively schedule them, just like you would a dinner date, but without having to negotiate over gluten-free or vegan menu choices. We are going to be good about this.
And while we won't be able to spend months away from home like we used to, we can still travel. We WILL go visit the places and people who mean so much to us.
Also, moving farther away from some dear friends in Spain and on the East Coast puts us closer to other dear friends on the West Coast, as well as family members, whom we haven't been able to visit nearly enough in the past.
Finally, we have the "pretend it isn't really happening" strategy! Our plans are provisional, and could change. We are not selling our Spain apartment yet, and it will take a while to sell our Provincetown condo. This means that we can live in a fantasy "maybe we'll see you soon!" world where we get to be in all places at once, and live close to all of our friends, and enjoy some of the world's most idyllic neighborhoods, if only in our own delusional minds.
How about you all, have any of you had to say some hard "See you laters?" Do you stay in touch with distant friends and family?
Oh, and unless you do the feed reader thing, don't forget to sign up here to get a handy email notification whenever new Just Cranky posts come out! Because who the hell knows when the next one will be? (No spam or email address selling/sharing, I swear. )

I am very skilled at pretending it isn’t happening. The problem for me is that dogs (and maybe even cats) don’t do email.
ReplyDeleteCats try to do email—since the keyboard belongs to them—but they don’t spell very well.
ReplyDeleteMary Anne, you crack me up! One consolation for us about the new plan to settle in S.D. is that for the first time in a long while, we can get a cat! And maybe even a dog! We used to have two cats, one an angel and the other an adorable menace. But after they passed on, and we started splitting our lives in half, we realized we'd have to be petless. So there's that! And maybe we can teach them email for short voyages so they can tell us if the pet sitter is behaving.
DeleteI still remember and miss hearing about your last cat who was not an angel. I hope your next cat will help with the blog.
DeleteIt's very hard to be in this situation. Being intentional about keeping in touch, as you say, and visiting as often as you reasonably can is about the only way to deal with it.
ReplyDeleteThanks Messymimi! We just wish our friends weren't so damn likeable, it's all their fault.
ReplyDeleteIt's so good to hear from you again. I haven't been in the blogosphere for a very long time! It sounds to me as though you have well thought out plans for deciding where you need to be. I can't give you any advice at all because I barely even go to town anymore! Too many mobility issues, and maybe, just maybe, a little laziness. My only advice is yeah, get a cat. Or a dog. Or both. Or a couple of each!
ReplyDeleteBag Lady! So nice to see you here. And given your mobility issues (and weather!) you are hereby excused from anything but pleasant nearby adventures! I love your advice, although a couple of each sounds like a lot of work. Maybe we'll start with one and see how it goes. :)
DeleteHi there, Bag Lady! [waves]
DeleteCrabby - one of each is a good start!
DeleteHi, Mary Anne in Kentucky! (waving back)
Well, I wish I could join you in SD. My son still lives there. His only complaint has been the rising electricity costs. We lived in San Jose for about ten years and would go back in a heartbeat if we could afford to. Anyway, safe travels to you two. I hope CA is good to you! I'm glad you have three places to choose from too. :)
ReplyDeleteWe've been snowed/iced in since Saturday. It's Tuesday here now. We won't be able to get out tomorrow either. There's 3-4" of ice under 5"+ of snow with an ice crust over the top of it all. Here in the south, it means we are stuck at home for quite a while yet.
Things are pretty scary around here. I worry that even when 'we' have small wins, that folks will get complacent. That would not be good.
Carry on my friend, carry on!
Oh shoot, we all knew ICE could be dangerous, but it sounds like Mother Nature's ice sandwich is pretty perilous as well. Hope you get to escape soon! That's a long time to be trapped, hope you have provisions!
DeleteSan Diego HAS gotten a lot more expensive since the last time we lived there; we do feel lucky to still be able to afford it. If you ever find yourself out west visiting your son, give us a holler! We can have lunch on tiny plates.
Fortunately CA is a pretty stubborn blue state, and while nowhere isn't scary these days, I think it would be foolish for the decrepit orange lunatic to take us on. (We were both born and raised in CA, and despite many decades in other states/countries we still feel like Californians at heart).