In
2008 I was living in France and having a fabulous time doing incredibly stupid
things across the European continent. At
Christmas time I decided to follow my friend to Spain where she knew a whole
bunch of people, some of whom were willing to lend us their apartment while
they were traveling. This Christmas was
absolutely filled with stories I could share, including how I had my first kiss
in this apartment right after accidentally locking myself in the bathroom,
which apparently some people find pretty sexy. Who knew.
But that’s not the story I’m going to tell. The story I have chosen is the story of how
my friend and I ended up wandering the streets of Barcelona at 4 a.m. because
we had forgotten to actually write down the address of this apartment before
leaving it to have Christmas Eve adventures.
It
started off amazing. We spent the
evening at an apartment with a number of expats from all over the world and danced
until nearly 4 am, at which point we decided maybe it was a little late and we
should go home. It hadn’t occurred
to us quite yet that we had no idea where home was. We only knew the metro stop nearest the
apartment, because that is where we had met our hosts earlier. Unfortunately,
the metro in Barcelona closed at some point and wasn’t going to reopen until 6
a.m. We could either wait two hours, or
attempt to take a night bus which theoretically would drop us a few streets
down from this metro stop. We would just
have to change buses once, and then ask the bus driver on the second bus to let
us know when to get off.
At 4
a.m, my friend and I were standing around shivering in the pre-dawn winter air
at a deserted bus stop waiting for a bus we hoped would actually come. After twenty minutes, it did. Thank goodness, because the two of us
were ready to collapse on the street and wait for the metro to open at 6.
Which
is what we should definitely have done.
But
we weren’t that smart.
The
bus itself was actually pretty crowded. A
lot of Christmas partiers. They say Spain is the country that knows how to
party, and let me tell you, the stereotype doesn’t come from nowhere. So I shouldn’t have been so surprised
to find a packed bus full of slowly sobering people at 4:30 in the
morning. We took the bus no
problem to Placa de Catalunya and got off, very proud of ourselves.
Until
we realized we had no idea where to find the bus we needed to transfer
to.
We
walked all around the square, going up to every bus driver asking if they were
the bus we wanted, and every time the driver pointed in some other
direction. It was a giant
game of connect the dots but with buses, and we ran back and forth and around
and across until finally we found a bus driver who said, yes, get on, this is
your bus.
Here
we came to a problem. My
friend and I only knew what metro stop we were near. No other significant markers, not even
the name of the street we were on. And
the bus driver had never heard of this metro stop. He advised us to ask the other
passengers.
It
was so wonderful that my friend was a native Spanish speaker.
We (my friend) started asking other
passengers about this metro stop, but no one had heard of it. We began to panic, because there was
no way we would recognize anything, we didn’t even know the name of the street
we were staying on, and…and…all around panic. Eventually though we found
one man who said, oh yeah! Florída! Yes, yes, we’ll pass right by the metro
there, you’ll just have get off the bus, walk a ways, turn left, turn right,
and you’re right there. He
told us that we should get off at the stop after he did.
This
meant that around 5:30 in the morning we stepped off the bus into an
area we had never seen before. And
could not remember how the man had told us how to find the metro. What should we have done? I’m still not really sure. There was no one around to ask
directions, we had no map…
Whatever
we SHOULD have done, we certainly should absolutely not have done what we
did. Which was picked a
direction and started walking. My
friends, please don’t ever find yourselves wandering a foreign city in the wee
hours of the morning on Christmas day with all the drunk creepy people
completely lost. It is a
BAD IDEA. I cannot stress
this enough. Everyone says,
do not go wandering alone in the night you could get murdered or raped or
whatnot and you may kind of shrug it off and think, well, clearly bad things
can happen but they probably won’t.
This
is FOOLISH THINKING. Some
things maybe you have to learn the hard way. I can tell you one thing, next time
I’m taking a taxi no matter what. This
was a horrible experience. We
saw fights, we hid behind walls and in doorframes from crazy people, we ran to
avoid groups of very drunk guys who looked indescribably frightening, and in
the end we stopped on a street corner, horribly lost and afraid to go in any
direction for fear of running into people or getting even farther from
home.
Finally,
we saw a police car. We
started to run after it, hoping to catch their attention and get directions, or
even better, a ride. But we
weren’t fast enough, and we stopped again on the sidewalk, dejected and
despairing. But miracle of
miracles, the police car stopped just within our view. Without saying a word both of us
started to run at the same time towards the car, but before we made it the
police officers jumped out of the car and ran into a building. We slowed a little, and in the next
few seconds, two more police cars showed up and stopped in front of the
building. All the officers
got out and ran inside. My
friend and I looked at each other. We
couldn’t decide which was worse. Continuing
into the unknown, or waiting around by the police cars in front of a building
where god knows what crime had been or was being committed. There were a lot of police officers,
so we were afraid it was a pretty big crime. In the end we decided to wait, because
criminals in handcuffs scared us less than the criminals running around loose
on the streets.
We
waited about twenty minutes. I
have no idea what on earth those police officers were doing in there, perhaps
having coffee and tea with the perpetrators, because they all came out together
laughing and smiling, with no criminals in tow, and were quite surprised to see
two frightened looking girls huddled together against one of their cars. My friend took over, for obvious
reasons, and got directions to our metro stop. The police officer talking to us
thought it was hilarious that a) we had gotten so lost, and b) we didn’t even
know the name of the street we were staying on.
Travel
tip #1, always know where you live. Could come in handy. Travel tip #2, carry a map, because
knowing where you live is often useless unless you know how to get there.
The
policeman flirted like mad with both of us. He told us nothing would happen to us
in Barcelona, it’s a wonderfully safe city, and all we had to do was walk four
blocks down and six blocks over and we’d be fine.
We
thanked them and walked until we were out of sight and then we ran until we got
to our apartment. We went
to bed immediately.
The
next morning brought new madness and poor decisions, and the next week
brought the amount of adventure some people don’t have in a lifetime. Maybe this blog will revisit that week at some point in the future.
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