Another Hopscotch has come and gone. Like last year, I had a lot of fun, saw a lot of bands--about twenty, if I'm remembering correctly--and spent a lot of money on delicious downtown food & drink. Unlike last year, I was unfamiliar with about 95% of the bands playing this year. I love live music under pretty much every circumstance, but it's a different experience when you can sing along to songs you know. I can't choose the first or second Hopscotch as my favorite, so I guess I'll just have to look forward to the third. Thanks, Hopscotch and Raleigh, for throwing another great summer send-off party!
Hopscotch, before
You've taken 362 days to regain strength and increase stamina. You remember the quickest path from Tir na nÓg to Berkeley Cafe. You have this paper, a phone app, a pocket schedule, too many Google links and a dozen friends tugging you in different directions. There's a wristband on your arm, and your work colleagues don't understand why. It's Hopscotch weekend: Don't conserve energy. Expend it. Rest will come sooner than you'd like.
- Greg Lowenhagen, Hopscotch founder and director
Last year, the inaugural Hopscotch Music Festival was sort of like a going-away party. It was this great huge event all across downtown Raleigh that happened to fall during my last weekend in town before I took off for a year in Spain. This year, I'll have two weeks to bask in post-festival bliss, and I have no doubts that Hopscotch will wow and exhaust me just as much as it did a year ago. It all starts tonight!
Home Sweet Home
My time in Spain has come to an end... for now. It had it's highs and lows for sure. I made lots of wonderful friends, traveled all over Spain and to five other countries(Germany, Czech Republic, England, Scotland, and Portugal), and had one of the most interesting months possible.
Uclés was... stressful, fun, annoying, hilarious, irritating, eye-opening, confusing, and one of the best experiences of my life. I spent, more or less, 24 hours a day with the same 20 or so people for an entire month. We all met under really strange circumstances: being thrown into an English teaching summer camp in a tiny town in the middle of nowhere, Spain, with nothing in it but a bar, a small convenience store, and a pharmacy. Fridays would come and we'd let loose at the "discoteca" in town--the attic of someone's house that had a minibar and a CD player in it. We lived in a centuries-old monastery that creaked at night and is said to be haunted, naturally. We ate oversalted camp food for a month and often hoarded fresh fruit in classrooms. My "office" was a desk in the corner of the staff room, and later a dark video room. As often as I felt stressed out or fed up with my day or the people or really anything, now that it's over I don't remember all of that as much as I remember how much fun it really was.
Uclés was an odd experience. It was only a month, but it was very difficult to say goodbye to everybody on Friday afternoon. I met some really wonderful people that unfortunately raised the difficult question, "will I ever see you again?"
Now I'm home. Today is my birthday. I'm so jet-lagged that I woke up at 5am feeling completely rested. I have a bed that's twice as big as I am, cats running around my room, and vanilla yogurt and ginger ale waiting for me downstairs. It's good to be home. Madrid, no te echaré de menos en Septiembre...
Visa update
The visa is here! After a brief period of worrying and not being able to get through to the consulate, my visa has arrived and now I can go to Spain. I haven't even begun thinking about what/how to pack... more on that later. 18 days!