Ten Months Under the Sun: What Costa del Sol Taught Me

The Belief

Moving to a new country is about desire.
If you want it enough, it works.

The Break

That assumption doesn’t hold.

Many people arrive with intention.
Most don’t stay.

Desire doesn’t determine outcome.
Alignment does.


System Breakdown

1. Preparation vs Assumption
Some arrive expecting:

  • English access
  • fast systems
  • flexibility around rules

Spain operates differently:

  • language is local
  • systems are procedural
  • pace is intentional

Preparation determines access.


2. Ego vs Integration
“I paid, so I belong” doesn’t work.

Money can secure housing.
It doesn’t secure cultural acceptance.

Integration comes through:

  • respect
  • participation
  • effort

3. Pace Mismatch
Costa del Sol runs on:

  • heat cycles
  • social rhythm
  • lived time

Not urgency.

If you resist that pace:

  • frustration rises
  • energy drains
  • experience degrades

4. Culture Is Participation
People often say:
“They don’t let us into the culture.”

That’s a misunderstanding.

Culture isn’t granted.
It’s practiced:

  • helping someone off a bus
  • showing up locally
  • speaking imperfect Spanish

No invitation required.


What Actually Happened

This wasn’t random.

I prepared:

  • studied the culture
  • worked on my Spanish
  • understood the systems

I also had alignment going in.
Argentina had already taught me:

  • slower living
  • longer conversations
  • presence over speed

That didn’t make it easy.
It made it possible.


The Bureaucracy Lesson

Spain’s systems are structured.

At the consulate, I watched people get turned away:

  • unprepared
  • posturing
  • expecting exceptions

At one point, I almost joined them.

A form had changed.
We were seconds from being dismissed.

Instead of pushing back, I asked:
“What can we do?”

That shifted the interaction.

We adjusted. Returned. Completed the process.

No ego.
Just alignment.


Reframe

It’s not:

“Do I adapt to this place?”

It’s:

“Where do I adapt—and where do I remain unchanged?”

Total adaptation isn’t the goal.
Neither is resistance.

Sustainable integration comes from selective alignment:

  • adapt to systems that enable function
  • maintain identity where it preserves stability

System Insight

Every environment applies pressure.

If you absorb all of it, you lose structure.
If you reject all of it, you lose access.

The balance:

  • adapt to participate
  • remain intact to exist

This isn’t compromise.
It’s system navigation.


Application

If you’re considering a move like this:

  • study before arrival
  • align with how systems actually work
  • learn the language (even imperfectly)
  • respect the pace
  • drop the idea that money replaces effort
  • decide what parts of yourself do not change

Result

If you align:

  • the system works
  • the culture opens
  • life stabilizes

If you don’t:

  • friction increases
  • isolation grows
  • the experience fails

Closing

The goal isn’t to become the place.

It’s to function within it—
without disappearing inside it.

— Oddly Robbie

Comments

2 responses to “Ten Months Under the Sun: What Costa del Sol Taught Me”

  1. Nicolás Strappaveccia avatar
    Nicolás Strappaveccia

    And what an experience, everyone should get to feel that way at least once! Great blog 🤩👏🏻

    1. oddlyrobbie.eu avatar

      Thank you. Nico

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