Surely a couple of hours after setting foot in Cádiz town centre and been treated like FAMILY again by the locals I'll embrace it all again.
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Surely a couple of hours after setting foot in Cádiz town centre and been treated like FAMILY again by the locals I'll embrace it all again. But there's an OPENNESS quality the Coruñese has that is hard to find in Cádiz. You can literally talk about anything. Whereas in Cádiz lots of subjects causes people to be dismissive.
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Surely a couple of hours after setting foot in Cádiz town centre and been treated like FAMILY again by the locals I'll embrace it all again. But there's an OPENNESS quality the Coruñese has that is hard to find in Cádiz. You can literally talk about anything. Whereas in Cádiz lots of subjects causes people to be dismissive.
At first I thought they'd be more of a close-knit society, because in Spain we've been raised with the prejudice that the openness is on the South and the closeness is on the North,
Catalans are notoriously more of a closed society than Andalusians, still I fit there FINE because I'm weirdly adaptable. So I imagined Galicians would be somewhere between the openness of Cádiz and the closeness of Catalans.
I couldn't have been more wrong. You get instantly adopted wherever you go. These people are quite a lot more open than Gaditans. And when you meet them you meet THEM, not a facade. Andalusians are notoriously fake.