Focus on Mexico Blog

Retired Expats in Lake Chapala

(Karen McConnaughey, Living in Mexico, Retiring in Mexico) Permanent link   All Posts

Bill and Karen McConnaugheyAs Bill and I look back over our more than seven years of living in the Lake Chapala area, we know one thing without a doubt…moving here was one of the best decisions we have ever made.

We made the decision based on the reason many of you do: We were tired of working, and wanted to enjoy whatever years were available to us. Bill was 62 when we retired to Lake Chapala, and I was almost 58. We didn’t know what to expect…neither of us had ever been to Mexico on a trip, let alone lived here! During our research we found that Lake Chapala had the best weather and the cost of living was way below what we were used to in the United States. We were both so tired of snow in the winter and hot and humid days in the summer that we knew we needed something different, weather-wise. As for a lower cost of living, we were able to retire on Bill’s social security alone. Of course, we had bought a house in Mexico, so we were not paying rent.

The one thing we didn’t anticipate, but experience every single day of our lives is the warmth, kindness and generosity of the Mexican people. I’m sure you all realize you can have perfect weather and reasonable expenses and still be miserable because you’re not enjoying life. Don’t you usually find that’s because of the people who surround you? We find that too! I would like to share some of our experiences with the Mexican people we call our friends.

When we moved into our Mexican village…and don’t be confused, thinking I’m being cute and quaint; it IS truly a Mexican village with only about 25 gringos living in a community of about 25,000…I knew only the basic Spanish that everyone picks up, Gracias, Buenos Dias, De nada, and so on. Very, very basic. Bill was fluent in three languages, none of which was Spanish! Our neighbors were wonderful. Once they knew I was trying to learn Spanish, they spoke to me in one-syllable words. For instance, if the electricity went out, and I wasn’t sure whether it was just us, our barrio (neighborhood) or the village, I would usually walk up to the front gate to see if someone knew. Fernando (or one of his multi-generational family living in the house across the street) usually was sitting on the stoop. I would ask, “Luz?” (Lights?), and they would wave their hands back and forth in the universal sign of an X, and say, “No, no luz!” We got along just fine.

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