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The Insider's Guide to Malcocinado, Spain

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Excerpts from Spain Expat
November, 2000

SpainExpat was a website we created in 2000 (my first one!). Eventually, the job of maintaining the site became too great, and we gave it away. These are excerpts from that site.

Quiz: Are you American or Spanish?
Cultural differences between the USA and Spain
Other American/Spanish cross-cultural restos
"About Us" page for Spain Expat

 

Quiz

For those cross-culturally confused souls who really aren't sure whether they're from Spain or North America, we offer a short quiz:

1. How many continents are there in the world?

2. How many lives does a cat have?

3. What country was Christopher Columbus from?

4. Was Francis Drake a pirate or an explorer?

5. What event happened in 1898?

6. Who is Boney M and Suzi Quatro?

7. Would you rather go to a crowded bar with bad decor or a bar with empty seats and good decor?

8. Who cooks better: the French or your mother?

9. How do you respond to the question "How are you?"

10. Did Jesus have blonde or brown hair?

11. If something puts two fingers behind your head while you're having your photo taken, what do the fingers represent?

12. What was the best Monty Python movie?

13. What animal laid a golden egg?

14. Do you like black licorice (regaliz)?

15. How are your parents doing?

 

Answers

You're Spanish if you answered:

  1. 5 continents (North and South America are one continent; Antarctica doesn't make the cut.)
  2. 7 lives
  3. You mean Cristobal Colón, right? He was born in Spain.
  4. Pirate
  5. "War of Independence" (the Spanish Empire ended as Cuba and the Philippines declared independence).
  6. American hitmakers of the seventies (Ottowan, Jennifer Rush?)
  7. Crowded bar
  8. My mother
  9. "Hoy me duelen un poco los riñones, porque parece que va a cambiar el tiempo..."
  10. Jesus had blonde hair.
  11. The horns of a cow.
  12. La Vida de Brian.
  13. A chicken.
  14. I love it.
  15. Well, they cook and help with the kids, but my mother drives me crazy -- she calls 3 times a day.

You're American if you answered:

  1. 7 continents
  2. 9 lives
  3. Italian
  4. Explorer
  5. "Spanish-American War" (the USA claimed dibs on Cuba and the Philippines)
  6. Who?
  7. Give me the empty seat.
  8. The French
  9. "OK, and you?"
  10. Jesus had brown hair.
  11. Martian antennae.
  12. The Holy Grail.
  13. A goose.
  14. Awful -- I used to give the black jelly beans to Dad.
  15. They're keeping busy -- church events, shows, trips -- I call them every month or so.

So don't believe everything you learned in grade school. (And if you're a Spanish cat, tough luck.)

Other Spanish/American cross-cultural restos

After copious research, we discovered that Charo was in fact born and raised in Murcia, Spain. When she was 15, she married Xavier Cugat.

A short history of Florida from Wikipedia

The Spanish American War from Wikipedia That's how the USA got Guam.

Hernando de Soto from Wikipedia Buried in Jerez de los Caballeros. Nice town. I highly recommend being buried there.

Francisco Coronado from Wikipedia

Fray Junípero Serra from Wikipedia Click on the wikilink to his chosen namesake, Saint Juniper -- now there was a great man.

The American expat's drift into the Spanish way:

  • The easiest to accept is metric. Jimmy Carter tried but failed.
  • Times: Military time is easy to accept too, but my brain's still a bit slow. (And "dos" sounds too much like "doce".)
  • Phone: 3 digits, 3 digits, 4 digits, easy. The Spanish just can't agree here.
  • Dates: It took about 5 years to go from month/day/year to day/month/year. Makes sense.
  • Names: Two first names, two last names. After 15 years, I moved from a NIE to DNI, so my mother's last name has risen again.
  • Games: I just refuse to accept that turns go counterclockwise. Not budging on this one.
  • Candy: I now like black licorice, but I still miss Reese's peanut butter cups.

Cultural differences between the USA and Spain

And now it's the time for wild generalizations, which are always a lot of fun, and sometimes even contain an element of truth.

At the risk of patronizing, to me Spain harkens back to a more wholesome time, like, say, the Eisenhower era in the USA. I think during the isolation of the Franco years, Spain got stuck in time. After Franco, the country worked overtime playing cultural catch-up (witness the El Destape movie phenomenon of the late 70's). The generation gap between Franco-era parents and post-Franco children is enormous, and yet these Franco-era parents still dominate the picture, with their lead role in the extended family. Almost certainly the Franco-era mother was and is principally a housewife, while the husband was the breadwinner (just like in 'Leave It To Beaver'!)

That means the mother still knows how to clean and cook. A typical Spanish house is undoubtedly cleaner than an American house (and the Spanish are quick to tell you they invented the fregona). Were you surprised when you first saw someone mopping the sidewalk in front of their house or business? As for cooking, American grandmothers knew the art, their daughters lost it, and their yuppy grandchildren tried to recover it, but neglected the basics. (How many Americans can look at a slab of meat in the supermarket and tell its quality? How many can use a pressure cooker?)

It also means the father does not know how to clean and cook. I was helping out in my Spanish mother-in-law's kitchen last Christmas. Various visitors dropped by and saw a male in the kitchen. From all the 'times have changed' comments I got, it was clear that times hadn't changed that much.

The family is more important here than the individual. In the USA, a newborn baby gets a social security number. In Spain, the newborn gets added to the Libro de Familia. Countless TV programs feature children singing flamenco or in game shows (with numerous pans to the proud parents). Either because of the importance of the family, or because of higher unemployment, or because the mother's main job is "mother" and would hate to lose her job, it's not at all uncommon for the children to stay at home until (and beyond) age 30. More importantly, it's not at all frowned upon. In the USA, of course, you'd be tagged with the word "loser". Children in Spain are not thinking "I can't take my parents another minute. I gotta get outta here". Parent/child friction isn't there, or it's there but it's accepted. Husband/wife friction is accepted too. In Spain, a judge in a divorce case can order the couple back to living together if the judge finds insufficient grounds for the divorce (and no mutual accord): lack of love, or "he's a jerk" do not qualify.

Groups are treated like extended families. The Sevilla feria is based on these groups -- everyone belongs to a few. Do you see anyone eating alone at a restaurant (besides the tourist)? Americans need their space; the Spanish enjoy a crowd. A big event is El Gordo Christmas lottery drawing -- a single person never wins: everyone buys fractions of tickets from everyone else. Why does Spain have such a paltry number of deranged murderers? There are no loners like in the USA; once you've lost touch with your family and everyone else, it's much easier to lose touch with reality. Because there are (fortunately) so few deranged murderers and (unfortunately) so few immigrants with different cultural backgrounds, everyone becomes a "tio" of everyone else. That is, everyone tends to look out for each other. That's great when someone at the bar notices that your baby has his hand in the door jamb, but not so great when someone stops you in the street in midsummer to tell you that your baby can catch a cold with those bare feet (short pants in winter, though, are okay here).

Since the family gathers at mealtime, food is of great importance here. Look at the common expressions, like "está como un queso", "es un chorizo", "más buena que pan". The Spanish are very proud of their gastronomic tradition, so for God's sake, don't tell anyone you prefer Thai. I've heard Spanish return from their New York holiday amazed that Americans will sit (alone) on a park bench to eat their lunch: how disrespectful! Americans have long lost any notion of tradition, and this is most apparent with food. The chemical food revolution arrived in the 50's with a vengeance, then the pendulum swung far the other way with organic and fat-free food, leaving most Americans confused (yes, there is a difference between grease and olive oil) and still in worse health than the Spanish.

Americans are obsessed and stressed about work -- individual achievement there is the measure of self-worth. During their free time, they take self-improvement courses: try to learn a language, psychoanalyze themselves, learn how to cook. The Spanish take it easy. When the mother of the house has finally finished cleaning, she goes with her friends to take a walk to the other end of town and back; it's not for exercise, it's for no real reason!

"About Us" page for Spain Expat


SpainExpat is the creation of Pura Yorente (from Extremadura) and her husband Tom Strong (from Pennsylvania). We have reason to believe that many years ago, our grandmothers in Heaven met and decided we would make a fine match. Tom at that point was in Trinidad on his way to search out a drum master in Brazil. Nana Tess and Mama Lina managed to re-orient him, guiding him with invisible hands to Madrid, where Pura had broken up with her boyfriend and was quite enjoying being single again. Ah, but her grandmother knew of her weakness for blondes. For some reason, Pura didn't break the first date with him, and was vaguely pleased that the Portuguese subtitles of the Hungarian movie they saw didn't draw complaints from him. During those first dates, she figured he didn't understand a word of her Spanish either. A year and a half later they got married in Guadalupe (by then Tom could have understood the priest, had his mind not been on other things). They then ran through countless apartments (well, Pura counts 15) in Madrid, Boston, New York, and Sevilla. Both have decided to finish with this habit, and are trying to get settled in their latest home in Sevilla.

Pura has opened her law office on the ground floor, Tom is a software engineer in his office on the top floor, Adrian and Teo share office space on the middle floor.

After we arrived in Sevilla, we wanted to pass on the knowledge we gained in getting settled here. In November of 2000, we launched SpainExpat to help newcomers to Spain get oriented and to try to form a network of support among the expats.

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