By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Crossing the Atlantic for a Better Life
In May 2024, after 32
years of living in Southern California, Karina Nuvo hit a wall.
Coming out of a
pandemic-induced lull in the singing gigs that made her happy and left her
feeling fulfilled, the two-time Grammy-nominated artis found herself
under an incredible amount of stress.
She’d taken on jobs
as a real estate agent and property manager at a Pasadena apartment building
where she’d had a string of rough moments, including encountering a tenant dead
in his apartment.
Nuvo was also busy
taking care of her octogenarian father.
“I couldn’t focus on
singing, I couldn’t focus on real estate, I had to put my dad in an assisted
living facility. My health just took a toll; it was killing me,” says Nuvo, 55.
By May 2024, with the
political climate in the US on tenterhooks again as Donald Trump’s presidential
campaign swung into full tilt, Nuvo says it all “just felt like too much.”
“I made a decision
that I was leaving, that I was going to Europe. The job stress was what pushed
my situation, but also politically, I just couldn’t fathom what was coming,”
she says.
She told her parents
about her plans to leave.
It was then that
Nuvo’s father, Jose Novo (Karina uses a modified spelling of this surname
professionally), reminded her that they’d always had a way out, a path to try
living a different kind of life in Spain since they were able to apply for
citizenship in that country.
Novo was born in
Camagüey, Cuba, and came to the United States for a better life at the age of
21. But his father (Karina’s grandfather) was born in Spain, which entitled
both him and his children to pursue citizenship through the ley de nietos (the “grandchildren’s law”).
Also called the Law
of Democratic Memory, the ley de nietos, set
to expire October 21, 2025, grants descendants of Spaniards persecuted during
the Spanish Civil War and subsequent Francisco Franco dictatorship a path
to Spanish citizenship.
Nuvo told her father,
then 87, she would go to Spain and submit her application for Spanish
citizenship there.
“His response was,
‘Please, I don’t want to die here in this place,’” she says. So she asked him
if he wanted to move there with her.
“He didn’t even
hesitate; he was like, ‘Yep,’” Nuvo says.
So, she set to work
selling most of their worldly possessions on Facebook Marketplace, packed a few
suitcases, and put her plan into motion.
Crossing the Atlantic for a better life
The only time Nuvo
and her father had attempted to travel to Spain together was on a cruise that
left from Fort Lauderdale in 2022. He got COVID long before they made it to
Spain. They had to disembark from the ship in the Azores, where she checked her
dad into a hospital.
“It was the only time
I tried to take him to Spain, and I failed miserably,” Nuvo says.
So before leaving
California, Nuvo told her father, a bladder cancer survivor, that they had to
be on the same page. If something similar happened once they moved to Spain —
if he got sick and wasn’t well enough to live in their new shared home — he
might have to go back into assisted living there. Jose agreed.
Nuvo set to work
looking for a place for the two of them to live, tapping the real estate website
Idealista for potential rentals and
talking to brokers to figure out the best location in Spain for a move.
Originally, she says,
she was set on Málaga, along the Andalusia coast, but was dissuaded by the
housing prices. A broker suggested that Nuvo consider the nearby Costa del Sol
town of Fuengirola, about 20 miles south, which has similarly flat terrain that
would be easy for her father to navigate, as well as a lower cost of living.
Nuvo was still in
California when she found a nearly 1,200-square-foot apartment in the town with
two bedrooms that looked perfect. It was a few blocks from the beach and had a
view of the sparkling Mediterranean from the balcony.
“I went, ‘oh my god,
it’s dad’s dream, by the ocean,’” says Nuvo. The monthly rent was 1,050 euros
(around $1,150), a fraction of what they’d both been paying in California to
live.
After a stop in Miami
on the way to Europe, they landed in Spain in September 2024 with six pieces of
luggage and her dad’s walker and wheelchair in tow.
“I have a photo of
dad in front of the apartment right after we got to Fuengirola with a huge
smile. For me, though, because of the emotional trek it was to get there, I
went into a full panic attack at what I’d done,” Nuvo recalls.
She called her son,
20, who’s in college back in California, and cried, expressing her doubts. But
he assured her it was all going to be OK.
Karina Nuvo's mother
and stepfather, Gloria and Cesar Tarafa, came to visit soon after she and her
father arrived in Spain. The couple quickly decided to move to Spain, too.
It’s all in the family
Just a week after
Nuvo and her father arrived in Spain, her mother and stepfather, Gloria and
Cesar Tarafa, came to visit for 15 days. “We’re a modern family, everyone gets
along,” Nuvo says.
Nuvo’s mother and
stepfather were born in Cuba, like her father, but had spent most of their
lives in Miami and, later, California. They had been living for years in a
fixed-income adult community in Monrovia near Pasadena.
It didn’t take long
before Gloria and Cesar, then 87 and 73, decided they would make the move to
Fuengirola, too. They both also have the right to apply for Spanish citizenship
since they have parents or grandparents who were born in Spain.
The couple, who are
retired, returned to the US from their Spanish vacation in October 2024, sold
nearly everything they owned, and were back in Fuengirola a month later. They
moved into the apartment Nuvo shared with her father and set about applying for
Spanish citizenship.
Cesar says the
political climate in the US and the cost of living in the Los Angeles area both
contributed to their decision to leave.
Cesar first went to
Spain shortly before his 15th birthday (the age when military service was
mandatory for Cuban youth back then), when his parents sent him away from the
island to stay with family friends near Madrid. (He later left for the US).
He and Gloria, who
met in Miami as members of the Cuban diaspora there, had also vacationed in
Spain on several occasions and enjoyed it. And with Spanish as their mother
tongue, imagining a move there was easy, he says.
The four shared an apartment for a while in Spain.
“We decided we have
to make sure we enjoy our lives for however many years we have left,” he says,
adding that he knew the quality of life in Spain — and, in particular,
Andalusia — was good.
“The culture is also
very akin to our culture in Cuba. Cubans have a lot of similarities with the
Andalusian way of speaking and expressing ourselves, moving our hands and
exaggerating. So we knew if we were going to make the change, it would be to
this part of Spain,” he says.
Cesar says the
couple’s lifestyle has changed for the better because they can “do more with
less” in Spain.
“You don’t even have
to spend a lot of money. You can just go out and see people walking and see the
nightlife. This city is alive. People go to dinner at 9 or 10 p.m.,” he says.
Back home in
Monrovia, the couple would usually be in for the night at 6 p.m., he says,
watching TV.
“Here at 6 o’clock
you’re having a merienda (snack) and
then you go to dinner at 9. And the funny thing is that people don’t rush you
at restaurants. You can have a cup of coffee and sit down at a table for two
hours. It’s just a whole different mentality,” he says.
‘I just
love it.’
Cesar admits it’s
taken some getting used to Spanish bureaucracy and things moving a little bit
slower compared to the US, “but the overwhelming quality of life here is just
undeniable. We’re just trying to be like a sponge and suck everything in.”
Cesar compared his
recent departure from the US for Spain as eliciting similar feelings as when he
first left Cuba long ago, since both times he left everything behind.
“I knew when I left
Cuba that I was not going to be back ever, and I have the same feeling now,” he
says.
Gloria says the
people, style, and way of living speak to her in Spain. She left Cuba as a
young woman when she was recruited to work as a flight attendant for PanAm in Miami. She and Cesar lived in Florida for many
years before moving to California.
“The quality of life
here is life. The food, the people and the weather in this part of
Spain, I just love it,” says Gloria Tarafa.
Their American life
was so different, especially during the years after the pandemic, she says.
“Our life there was
OK. Half of my life is there, and I miss family members. But I have to try to
enjoy what is left of me. I’m 88, I’m not young,” Gloria says.
“Here, we go
downstairs and have coffee, we sit there and talk. In Monrovia there was no
social life for us. I might go to my son’s house or a friend’s once in a while,
but that was it,” she says.
“The quality of life
here is life. The food, the people, and the weather in this part of
Spain, I just love it.”
A tough decision
By January of 2025,
Nuvo’s father, Jose, was having health complications, she says.
It was becoming far
too difficult for her to care for him at home. So together they made the
difficult decision to move him into an assisted living facility in February in
nearby Marbella, about 20 miles west of Fuengirola.
Nuvo says she felt
very guilty and wondered if bringing him to Spain had been a mistake.
“But then he’ll just
tell me he loves it. He spent months enjoying Fuengirola. And now he says he’s
sitting out looking at the ocean in Spain, eating his favorite foods like tortilla
española and croquetas and
speaking Spanish with everyone,” she says.
The facility costs
2,300 euros (about $2,500) a month, far less than his assisted living facility
in California, and it includes physical therapy, access to a psychologist and
all living expenses and meals as well as daily activities.
Nuvo talks to her
father every day on the phone and visits him twice a week in his private room
with a balcony overlooking a lush garden, which she says feels more like a
palace than an assisted living facility.
“Things still take my breath away here, just the
kindness of everybody," says Karina Nuvo.
The main reason she
moved from California to Spain, Nuvo says, was for a better quality of life and
“saving our mental, emotional, and physical wellbeing.” It’s a goal she feels
she’s so far achieved with her family.
She, her mother, and
her stepfather recently moved into a larger three-bedroom rental apartment in
Fuengirola with sea views from a sprawling balcony right in the center of town.
The location allows Cesar and Gloria to get out and walk to everything with no
car needed and continue enjoying their new Spanish lifestyle. The rent is 1,400
euros, or about $1,500.
Nuvo says her living
expenses in Spain compared to Los Angeles have been nearly halved. Once she
gets her work permit as a citizen, Nuvo says she plans to get back to what she
loves doing for work — pursuing singing gigs around Europe and helping people who
are also considering a move find real estate opportunities in
Spain.
She loves California,
she says, but it was time to go. And she has no regrets.
“Things still take my
breath away here, just the kindness of everybody. They cherish and appreciate
their lives. And the elderly are treated like royalty,” she says.
“Even with everything
that’s happened, even with my son still living in California, I can’t explain
it. I feel like I’m supposed to be here.”
‘One adventure after another adventure’
As for her father,
Jose says his whole life has been an adventure, and he chalks this experience
up as another one.
“I left Cuba when I
was 20 years old. So, from there on I went to Costa Rica, working for my
company. Then, I went to the Dominican Republic to work for another company.
So, it’s been one adventure after another adventure,” he says.
Jose Novo says he has no regrets.
He has no complaints
about the assisted living facility in California where he was living before he
left.
“People there were
very nice to me. And I had people that I care very much for. People here are
very good, too,” he says, adding that the cost is a big differentiating point
and he finds the Spanish facility “more sophisticated.”
As for any regrets
about crossing the ocean to finish out his remaining years, Jose says he has
none.
“Why would I? I’m in
the country of my family because my father was born in Asturias, and my
grandparents on my mother’s side were born in Galicia. I have Spanish blood
running through my veins,” he says.
To anyone who’s
considering a similar move, no matter at what stage of life, his advice is
simple.
“Follow your heart —
and don’t be afraid.”
Terry
Ward is a Florida-based travel writer and freelance journalist in Tampa
who hopes to one day relocate with her family to Europe, too.
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