Local
If change is the only constant For the last week, usually did not include the first three days, as traffic got heavy with all the motorcades of surely very important people being escorted to and fro the airport, the convention center and hotels. They made me feel as if I were in Davos, except for the heat and the fact that I was not being escorted! All these delays and blockades gave me extra time to start thinking about the changes that Puerto Vallarta has undergone since I met her ten years ago.
Puerto Vallarta has recently been host to a couple of important events at world level, the Tianguis Turístico in the last week of March, and the World Economic Forum on Latin America just last week. Having lived in this beautiful town for the last quarter of my life or so, I couldn’t but marvel of how
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much we have changed since I got here (those who have dwelled here longer than I sure have marveled more, though). For work and family reasons, I have to commute between Nuevo Vallarta and Puerto Vallarta twice a day and the drive is usually quick and easy.
April 23 - 29, 2012 | Issue 785
When I first got here it has just been named “The Friendliest City in the World” and everybody boosted about “how we have managed to keep the pueblito spirit and alive and kicking”. Well, people are still as friendly and nice as only we can be, but the pueblito feeling has faded quite a bit. At least, during the summit, I couldn’t perceive it.
And this got me into more thinking: How are we Mexican and expat locals dealing with our being a cosmopolitan metropolis now? How much are tourists that come to Vallarta enjoying these changes? How do we balance the benefits of our new status with the drawbacks it carries along? How are our local authorities managing this balance? (They are managing it, right?) If change is the only constant, how constant do we have to be in the near and mediate future? Adaptation might be the only answer, and we have proved to be adept at adapting in Puerto Vallarta. So, for now, let’s keep enjoying the paradise we live in, working with our characteristic push and drive; let’s continue welcoming our visitors and seducing them to return, even maybe as residents. It is on us if the changes to come are good ones, and I am sure they will be.