In 2020, I scheduled a 3-month trip to Veracruz for January through March. We all know what happened in 2020. By March, not knowing how bad this would be and worrying about airport crowds and flights getting cancelled, I took advantage of Delta's Covid-era offer to cancel or change flights without penalty.
Besides, from the minute I walked into my Airbnb, I felt at home and never wanted to leave. Staying past March sounded great to me.
Maybe it was this chair that looked so much like Bruce's office chair. I never sat in it. I sat on the bed and looked at it, sometimes talking to it (him.) It was not even two years since he had passed away, and I still had not figured out how to handle the grieving process.
Or this beautiful site as I walked toward the sea. I truly felt like I was someplace else, and I really, really wanted to be someplace else. Far away from hospitals and cold air-conditioning and cold winters and everything since 2018 that had chilled me to the bone. I had come to Veracruz to get warm.
And Veracruz, a tropical climate along the Gulf of Mexico, is indeed warm. The city center itself is beautiful with striking architecture, walkable streets, lovely parks.
From my Airbnb, all of this was within easy walking distance. Sunny skies and high 70s in January and February. A nice beach, interesting scenery, an Airbnb at $300 a month where they cleaned twice a week, changing towels and bedding. Is it any wonder I didn't want to leave all this and go back to the Covid mess in the US?
Covid did come to Mexico later, a few months behind America, but by then we had more information and clarification about it. It was not as frightening as it had been at first. This is how my three-month stay in Veracruz turned into a year, then another year, then finding a rental home and signing a three-year contract.
I furnished it myself and I loved that house, in the same neighborhood as my Airbnb.
Course I was happiest when it was filled with my people who came to visit.












What a lovely place! I'm glad you got to enjoy it so long. @samanthabwriter from
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Me too, Samantha. It's the longest place I have stayed since Bruce died. I was there nearly 4 years in all.
DeleteI've heard many good things about Veracruz. I really hope to get there one day.
ReplyDeleteI am surprised you've even heard of it, Al. Most Americans, even many expats to Mexico, aren't familiar with it. It is not a tourist destination for the Western world, but Mexicans who live inland do love to come here with their families and enjoy the beach, tropical climate, and fresh seafood. It is very family-centric, with the small-ish beach and aquarium.
DeleteA good place in which to heal.
ReplyDeleteIt was absolutely a healing place for me.
DeleteKaren I'm enjoying your series very much. You are taking the fear of travel from me.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Lisa. I really appreciate your visits and comments. It's been nice to discover your blog during the A to Z Challenge, actually the main reason I join up to find new blogs to follow.
DeleteA healing and safe haven. Are you still in Utah or have you moved on?
ReplyDeleteBTW thanks for highlighting my blog in your list.
Utah is my home base. I go back and forth.
DeleteIf you were going to get stranded anywhere in 2020, that was the place.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Liz!
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