San Miguel de Allende

Terry Barber: A Night of Emotion and Music in San Miguel on March 19

A countertenor knocks your socks off, every time. Because you don’t see it coming.

The fellow is moving along in the sweet clarity of a tenor through a lovely piece of music, something about love lost and regret, let’s say. You’re feeling it. Because the singing matches the lyrics and matches the emotions. On the edge of crying, let’s say.

Suddenly the singer veers upward into a celestial aural region that you were in no way expecting – up where the emotions and sensations are usually reserved for the pure of heart. For angels and their earthly equals.

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fiction, Rants and raves, San Miguel de Allende, Writings

Revenge gifts for annoying friends should be simple and subtle — but not a puppy!

A lot of people say to me, “Bob, I have this really annoying friend. Annoying, but not so bad that I want to kill him. Is there anything a passive-aggressive person like myself can do about this situation?”

My first instinct is to say, “My friend, you’ve come to the right place. Have you ever considered gifting them a puppy?

I don’t say that, however.

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fiction, San Miguel de Allende, Writings

Mock turtle soup

A young boy named Donny sits by the pond, staring at his lifeless pet turtle, the one that he had named Democracy. The turtle’s legs and head are nowhere to be found. There is just the colorful shell of Democracy.

Donny is inconsolable. He is bereft. The tears are rolling down his cheeks in waves.

His mother comes out and tries to comfort him but he wants none of it. Nothing she says reaches him through the heavy veil of grief.

“He’s dead. He’s dead,” he repeats over and over.

She calls their neighbor and friend, a psychiatrist, but nothing the man says can calms the boy.

“He’s dead. He’s dead,” he repeats over and over.

Finally, the father, Elon, returns home and takes the boy for a ride in his Tesla.

“We will have a wonderful funeral for Democracy. The best funeral. It will be like no other funeral in history. Perhaps the most amazing funeral ever. You can invite your best friends to attend.

“And when the funeral is over, we will have a feast in Democracy’s honor with all your favorite foods and the best cake and ice cream.”

“Really? Cake and ice cream?” asks Donny.

“Absolutely,” says Elon.

“And finally, we will bury Democracy out on the lawn, just below your bedroom window.  I will carve a beautiful and expensive tombstone for Democracy and put a little light on it. Whenever you want, you can turn the light on and off from a switch I will install next to your bed.”

The more Elon talked and promised, the better his son, Donny, began to feel. His eyes widened with each promise made by the father until they were like saucers. By the time they returned home Donny was on board.

So the two walked out to the pond, hand in hand, to begin making preparations for the burial of Democracy. In his head, Donny was drawing up a list of all the friends he would invite to the party.

Only, Democracy wasn’t dead.

The turtle was swimming around, as happy as can be. He had all his legs. He had his head, certainly, and he was chasing little tiny fish for supper.

Elon and little Donny just stood there, staring at the turtle. Wordless. Eyes wide. Jaws dropped.

Democracy was as healthy as ever.

Finally, quietly, Donny looked up to his dad with an expressionless face.

“Let’s kill it,” he said.

(I owe you one, James Thurber. The great humorist tells a version of this story in the introduction to “Collected Fables.” In fact, in one version of this story read on the radio, Bing Crosby was the voice of the father.)

The image above is generated by Artificial Intelligence.

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photography, San Miguel de Allende

Scentless: Flowers that will last forever

“Bob,” many of you ask me, “are the flowers in San Miguel really that beautiful? And are there really that many?”

I try to manage expectations.

“Yes,” I say. “There are that many flowers. And, yes, they are that beautiful.”

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photography, San Miguel de Allende, Uncategorized

Meet some of the guests of the Wednesday hot lunch program, So Others May Eat

“We are very close sisters, like we live in different ranches, we love to see each other once a week in the feeding program. We eat and talk about our lives and family. Thank you for this opportunity.”
Doña María Teófila López González, 70 years old, lives in Rancho de Huerta.
Doña Margarita López Gónzalez, 73 years old, lives in Rancho de Soria.

Hardly a Wednesday goes by that Frank Thoms and I don’t turn to each other and say, “Man, we are so lucky. We are so blessed.”

We come to that realization early and often.

We’re both volunteers at So Others May Eat, the hot lunch program in an obscure courtyard of the Parroquia de San Miguel de Arc Angel in San Miguel de Allende.

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Reviews, San Miguel de Allende, Writings

Monarch butterflies migrate on a wing and a prayer, but for how much longer … and does it matter?

Monica Maeckle is a glass-half-full kind of gal. 

How else to take her pronouncement about the Monarch butterfly on Tuesday night, that their ”migration is endangered, but the butterfly is not”?

It feels a little like saying “The Louvre Museum is burning to the ground, but we’ll still have great digital pictures of all the art.”

Frankly, I don’t know quite how I felt after Maeckle spoke as part of the i3 (ideas that inform & inspire) lecture series.

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San Miguel de Allende

Soprano Barbachano has grown from flirty teen boy to a young maiden to savvy Countess Rosina in ‘Figaro’

It was just one year ago that opera soprano Jacinta Barbachano performed in San Miguel de Allende as the youthful and highly desirable single Rosina in “The Barber of Saville.” One year on, she will have to age 10 years as the story resumes this weekend in “The Marriage of Figaro.”

Older but wiser, as they say. 

For soprano Barbachano that may well be the key to her character, the now Countess Rosina, in the highly anticipated Pro Musica production of “The Marriage of Figaro.”

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San Miguel de Allende, The Week in SMA

Go ‘Figero’: A night at the opera that’s right on the Marx (Harpo, Chico, Groucho …)

There is a comedy – a musical sitcom – about a powerful man who believes he has the right to do whatever he wants to women. 

It’s a sequel, in fact, that gives off a sort of a bro-boy’s “Your body, my choice” vibe.

But the women in this comedy are smart and savvy, with a sort of a “Me too” vibe. They know how to stand up to power in clever ways. They know how to work the angles on the patriarchy.

And, no, it is not called “Trump’s Second Term.”

The musical is actually an opera and it was written in 1786. A huge hit in its day. Now, it is considered one of the greatest operas of all time. 

Apparently, things haven’t changed all that much in the last 239 years.

The opera is Mozart’s “The Marriage of Figaro” with a libretto by Lorenzo Da Ponte.

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Reviews, San Miguel de Allende, Writings

A one-time Nicaraguan emigree to U.S. flourishes as a restaurateur in Mexico City

Barrio Cafe, Ave. Sonora 201, Cuauhetenoc,  Mexico City.
Barrio Cafe, Ave. Sonora 201, Hipódromo, Cuauhtémoc, Mexico City. (Photo by Barrio Cafe)

We were in Mexico City, enjoying coffee and a bite to eat at a corner restaurant just a block off the expansive Parque de Mexico, in the popular Hipódromo, Cuauhtémoc, neighborhood.

The young and athletic hostess Ayse Lang, who had seated us at the sidewalk table of Barrio Café, stopped by to see how our late-morning coffee break was going. 

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