Got an issue with personal space? Don’t bring it to a beach in Spain!
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It seems like every nationality has their own holiday
stereotype. Germans get up at ungodly
hours to put their towels on the best sunbed locations to reserve their spot;
the Japanese snap photographs of anything and everything; the Americans talk
loudly and can´t understand why the US dollar isn’t legal currency in every
country; the British hide their pasty complexions from the sun under ridiculous
clothes, and yet still turn into lobsters within 5 minutes of getting off the plane.
The Spanish love company.
They crowd on to the beach with no regard for personal
space. They seem to hold a belief that
if someone has selected an area of beach to occupy, that it must be prime real
estate, and they will set up their towels, umbrellas and sun shades as close as
possible. This is particularly unnerving
for Brits, whose personal space is an average of about 50cm, but much, much more when we are scantily clad
in swimsuits.
While we go to the beach for peace and quiet, the Spanish go
for a sense of community. We will
stake out an area a good distance from anyone else, for a slight illusion of privacy, yet on a mostly empty beach with plenty of
ideal spots to choose, the Spanish will still opt to set up camp for the day so
close that you can read the small print of their newspaper.
There is a Darwinian aspect to living in a foreign country,
and this is just another Spanish way of life that you have to adapt to if you
are going to enjoy time in their country.
1 response to Got an issue with personal space? Don’t bring it to a beach in Spain!
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Lily
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Josh Trevarthen
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Julie Schwietert Collazo
West Babylon -
Courtney
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Jon Brandt

Douglas Hil said on September 1, 2008
Ha! so true! I think this theory can be applied elsewhere to movie theaters, trains, and even waiting on the curb at crosswalk for the light to change. Spaniards sure love to heard like cattle. Its tough to keep your non-Mediterranean bubble intact. However because of this, a couple minutes outside of a city you’ll find no one and some much deserved solitude.