I know almost nothing about soccer (hereinafter referred to as “fútbol”), and almost nothing is slightly more than how much I knew about it this morning before our class took a field trip to the Barça Museum, which pays homage to the Barcelona fútbol team.
Fútbol is almost like a religion here, with the added bonus that it has a much more wholesome backstory than does the actual religion, Spanish Catholicism. And going to the Barça Museum immersive experience is more fun than going to church.We all met at the school and were about to leave when someone realized that no one had remembered to buy metro tickets, which meant someone had to walk to the nearest metro stop and buy a ticket for everyone. With 20 minutes to kill I jumped into action and did a review of fútbol-related vocabulary, undeterred by the fact that I don’t really know any fútbol-related vocabulary, in English let alone Spanish. But I came up with a few words and for each one I drew a picture. By the time the class figured out 3 or 4 of the words, spelled them and used them in a sentence, the tickets appeared and we left.
This is about half of our class. Almost everyone is from Algeria.
When I looked at the recording of my run, the elevation view showed that my neighborhood is slightly higher than the rest of the city, so all the way out is downhill and all the way back is uphill, possibly the only thing I hadn’t accounted for when I rented this place.




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