So, after a blissful month of travelling around, “leaving my heart” in Oaxaca/Puebla/Guanajuato (because I’m a pretentious student on my third year abroad, doncha know?), I came back to semi-reality here in Colima. I returned with a lot more “ganas” than I had had before the Christmas holidays, and threw myself into making more friends and integrating myself more into the international community in the city. This turned out to be a brilliant move, as it has resulted in experiencing a LOT more of what life here has to offer, in the company of some really beautiful people. More on that later!
A few weeks after I got back, my salsa teacher moved back to his native Oaxaca, handing management of the club over to me and my friend Claudia. Yes, I feel like Napoleon Dynamite: I came to Mexico on my year abroad and learned to dance salsa, before taking over ownership of a salsa group! Next step: world domination. Claudia is professionally trained, and a beautiful dancer with LOTS to teach me, which is really exciting. We both give classes, with her obviously taking the reigns as far as teaching the more advanced students goes, but it’s really fun and definitely not something I envisaged doing when I took off from London Heathrow last October!
The biggest news from February was that I decided to move out of the house I was living in, and move into the house of one of my friends. This was probably the most important thing I’ve done since I got here - not because there were any problems with the family I was living with - but in terms of my independence, and making the most out of every opportunity that is offered to me, it has proved an invaluable decision. That's about all on that!
Late February and early March marked the departure of a few friends here, so I pulled the party shoes out of the closet (not that they’d had much opportunity to gather any dust), and got my sweet groove on! Here I am at a fancy dress party, dressed as “drunk girl wearing a dress AND A MASK”.
For those doubters among you, yesthatcountsasfancydress.
We also went in a group to Manzanillo to spend the weekend at the beach, bidding our farewells to a much-loved pinche Canadian, Thomas! A couple of days at the beach, and a night sat by the pool in our hostel, drinking tequila and singing along to a guitar (repeat earlier comment about pretentious students). I went to bed at 3 or 4am, when the conversation was still flowing, but my world was spinning around just a little bit too fast for me to add anything worthwhile to it, so I stumbled my merry way to bed. The next morning, we spent an hour trying to wake Thomas up, who, it transpired, had drunk an entire bottle of tequila to himself, and stayed up to watch the sunrise. Here he is, passed out like an angel on his bed, before being rudely awakened by some ginger Brit mounting him like a pony.
We Brits are a frigid bunch.
Anyway, after another fantastic month of fun and larks, I contracted the flu, and spent almost three weeks straight in my bed every night, feeling sorry for myself. Because I am really intelligent, I decided not to go to the doctor or take any medication, resulting in a throat infection that left me looking and feeling something like ….
... That.
This gave me the kick up the arse I needed to get some advice from a doctor, which – luckily - came in the form of a student who diagnosed me in one of my English conversation classes, saving me the hassle of having to find a doctor myself! I am now on the mend, though still not functioning at 100% capacity.
A couple of weekends ago, one of the most wonderful people I’ve had the pleasure of meeting here celebrated his birthday, and a group of 9 of us went on a camping trip in paradise to mark the occasion. The pretentious student is about to rear its ugly head again, for those of you wanting to skip to the end. It was one of those experiences that everyone who was involved came away from feeling like they were part of a secret that is indescribable in words, so even if you wanted to share it with someone else, it wouldn’t be possible. So I won’t try to explain to you what it was like – I will just show you some pictures and tell you how lucky I feel that at the age of twenty one, I am living the kind of life that most people in Britain spend their whole lives working towards. They slave away so that they can put away money to be able to travel when they retire, but that’s such a huge risk! It might sound immature to say that I want to live my whole life like this, in Mexico, doing the things I love, so that when I retire I can look back on the life I’ve already lived and say, “I’ll just keep doing what I’ve been doing all along, because so far it’s been fucking fantastic”. There aren’t many people who get to say that, but I am determined to be one of them, and I will find a way to do it. That’s not to say I have no intention to work – I love working and I thrive off succeeding professionally – but I don’t believe that working hard and having fun are mutually exclusive, and I will keep trying in the hope that someone says, “Write me a regular column”, or “Report on politics in Mexico for me”, or SOMETHING that gets my heart pumping and allows me to live in a country that I am falling head over heels in love with.
Jealous?