Post by shahadat560 on Jan 18, 2024 2:54:08 GMT -6
"Before we saw Asians as a bit mystical because of their masks and now we all wear them." Julia López turned 88 on May 4. She uses that protection a lot to be able to work every day. She is a national teacher, but she ended up in photography, where she claims to be the permanent 'scholarship'.
"I had a very bad time with the closure. The days seemed very long," she confesses in the chair of a business that opened its doors more than half a century ago, in 1968. The late Paco Iglesias , her husband, who was the portraitist , chose the name, Sandine , because of the resemblance they attributed to him with an Argentine singer with a melodious voice.
He, who died of lung cancer at 71, wanted to be a boxer and was a miner, tried out as a soccer player and ended up as a graphic artist, a professional task that he combined with his other great hobby, that of orchestra Country Email List entertainer, and with the same artistic nickname. .
Doña Julia, as they call her, was widowed "almost" three decades ago, she tells Efe. "He, eleven years older than me, was the professional, and I was always helping; like now with Tavo ." She talks about one of her two sons, Gustavo, who will turn 58 next July and who continues the legacy.
"My mother does what she wants. It was difficult for her to close , at the time, when it was forced. And when we were able to reopen , she didn't want to give in."
"We told her that we had to wait to see how things went. She lasted two days. By the third day there was no one to leave her at home. She came by surprise. Fulfilling her wishes is something she earned and earned more than enough. It has been and "She is very good," says her descendant, whom this elderly woman describes as a "very calm" man.
Doña Julia gives a scoop that leads to loud laughter: "When Tavo retires, I'll go with him, of course." Gustavo, after recovering from the attack of laughter, adds condescendingly: "she is not into hobbies. If she liked to walk or the garden... but she is into habits . She feels here as a family, with her clients."
"I'm better off here," confirms Julia, who understands that the new normal is for everything to be as it was before as much as possible.
Doña Julia lives alone – "I am independent" – in a first place. Her granddaughter Carla, daughter of Tavo, with her husband and her daughter, in the second.
"I have a great-granddaughter who is a delight. Very active and knows a lot. It is always a surprise with her," the everlasting "apprentice" states enthusiastically.
During the confinement, this endearing "intern" from Compostela greatly missed her routines of eating and having breakfast outside. But like "Photos Sandine2", "Paradiso", a historic hotel establishment right next door, has returned to its usual activity.
Tavo is an octopus enthusiast. In the case of his mother, the spectrum of weaknesses widens: broth , tortilla, rice and sardines.
"I had a very bad time with the closure. The days seemed very long," she confesses in the chair of a business that opened its doors more than half a century ago, in 1968. The late Paco Iglesias , her husband, who was the portraitist , chose the name, Sandine , because of the resemblance they attributed to him with an Argentine singer with a melodious voice.
He, who died of lung cancer at 71, wanted to be a boxer and was a miner, tried out as a soccer player and ended up as a graphic artist, a professional task that he combined with his other great hobby, that of orchestra Country Email List entertainer, and with the same artistic nickname. .
Doña Julia, as they call her, was widowed "almost" three decades ago, she tells Efe. "He, eleven years older than me, was the professional, and I was always helping; like now with Tavo ." She talks about one of her two sons, Gustavo, who will turn 58 next July and who continues the legacy.
"My mother does what she wants. It was difficult for her to close , at the time, when it was forced. And when we were able to reopen , she didn't want to give in."
"We told her that we had to wait to see how things went. She lasted two days. By the third day there was no one to leave her at home. She came by surprise. Fulfilling her wishes is something she earned and earned more than enough. It has been and "She is very good," says her descendant, whom this elderly woman describes as a "very calm" man.
Doña Julia gives a scoop that leads to loud laughter: "When Tavo retires, I'll go with him, of course." Gustavo, after recovering from the attack of laughter, adds condescendingly: "she is not into hobbies. If she liked to walk or the garden... but she is into habits . She feels here as a family, with her clients."
"I'm better off here," confirms Julia, who understands that the new normal is for everything to be as it was before as much as possible.
Doña Julia lives alone – "I am independent" – in a first place. Her granddaughter Carla, daughter of Tavo, with her husband and her daughter, in the second.
"I have a great-granddaughter who is a delight. Very active and knows a lot. It is always a surprise with her," the everlasting "apprentice" states enthusiastically.
During the confinement, this endearing "intern" from Compostela greatly missed her routines of eating and having breakfast outside. But like "Photos Sandine2", "Paradiso", a historic hotel establishment right next door, has returned to its usual activity.
Tavo is an octopus enthusiast. In the case of his mother, the spectrum of weaknesses widens: broth , tortilla, rice and sardines.