Reflections on the ‘best small city in the world’: San Miguel de Allende

April 7, 2022

Overlooking San Miguel de Allende. By Steven Buchanan (CC0) via Pixabay. https://pixabay.com/photos/mexico-san-miguel-de-allende-dusk-5756222/
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A recent “Good Tour­ism” Insight about ‘jouis­sance’ promp­ted me to reappraise the con­cepts of sen­sa­tion and per­cep­tion and the pur­suit of pleasure. 

It triggered memor­ies of San Miguel de Allende, a magic­al UNESCO World Her­it­age-lis­ted colo­ni­al town in cent­ral Mexico. 

The story begins with an artist and one of Canada’s former fig­ure skat­ing cham­pi­ons, the late Toller Cranston. 

My wife and I had always wondered why he and so many artists had taken up res­id­ence in San Miguel. 

Michael Haywood sq300

The inside track

K Michael Hay­wood is Pro­fess­or Emer­it­us of the School of Hos­pit­al­ity, Food & Tour­ism at the Uni­ver­sity of Guelph in Ontario, Canada.

In 2012, to escape a fri­gid winter, we headed south to Mex­ico from our home in Canada and found ourselves ensconced in what could eas­ily be char­ac­ter­ised as a sac­red place, a mor­al envir­on­ment, a place that led our minds some­where else.

All our senses were engaged and put at our dis­pos­al an out­ward flow of atten­tion, an awaken­ing to sur­prise.

Such extreme levels of aware­ness about our sur­round­ings and their pur­pose fed a new­found aware­ness of ourselves, a won­der­ment, and a fresh con­nectiv­ity to the people and things around us. 

Des­pite our advanced read­ing of how spe­cial and wel­com­ing San Miguel de Allende was likely to be, we could nev­er have ima­gined such a cor­nu­copia of visu­al delight as we strolled through col­our­fully walled and shaded cobble­stone streets to find Toller Cranston’s stu­dio and home. 

There we were, so stunned by the sus­tained and beau­ti­ful forces of human and non-human nature that we were led to make a pur­chase that nobody could have resisted. 

But that was just the begin­ning. The trans­ac­tion ini­ti­ated a sense of conviviality. 

Toller invited us for cock­tails the fol­low­ing even­ing, and launched into an explan­a­tion as to how he had been seduced by the town and the region, its qui­es­cence provid­ing a refuge that con­cen­trated his cre­at­ive urges. 

How the town’s express­ive ener­gies led to a sense of belong­ing to the loc­a­tion of his long­ing. Ener­gies, as he poin­ted out, that con­di­tion all peoples’ vital­ity and inner selves. 

Ener­gies that affect their intel­lec­tu­al, psy­cho­lo­gic­al, and spir­itu­al well-being, dram­at­ising the power of places to move the soul.

Ener­gies that foster the capa­city for inter­ac­tion and engage­ment with oth­ers, that give the place an iden­tity, and that shape its unique reality.

Overlooking San Miguel de Allende in the evening. By Daniels Joffe (CC0) via Unsplash. https://unsplash.com/photos/V-QtUsMAIRM
Over­look­ing San Miguel de Allende in the even­ing. By Daniels Joffe (CC0) via Unsplash.

It’s true. At the root of a San Miguel exper­i­ence lies a pur­ity of expres­sion, the vibra­tions of a phe­nomen­on, a quiet excite­ment that gath­ers sen­su­al responses into a web of con­nec­ted mean­ing and express­ive imaginations.

Need­less to say, over the remain­ing course of our stay, my wife and I remained trans­fixed by the place. 

We spoke incess­antly about San Miguel’s archi­tec­tur­al charm and flor­al beauty; the vibrancy of its col­ors and sounds; its quint­es­sen­tial Mex­ic­an char­ac­ter and exuber­ant social life that spilled out onto streets, into mar­kets, and verd­ant parks. 

(Centro and El Jardin are the estab­lished foci for com­mun­al social­ising. Loc­als and vis­it­ors alike love to mingle and relax there.)

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We felt ever-present and part of a ver­nacu­lar that grew out of the prac­tic­al needs of San Miguel’s res­id­ents; a ver­nacu­lar shaped, for­tu­nately, by slow devel­op­ment and many forces: Nature and cli­mate; cul­ture and his­tory; tra­di­tions and reli­gion; build­ing design and mater­i­als; the arts and crafts; and, of course, tourism.

Change is inev­it­able, but tour­ism in San Miguel thrives on its his­tor­ic past.

We became aware of how the decisions of San Miguel’s muni­cip­al gov­ern­ment, influ­enced by UNESCO’s guidelines, were made in response to both imme­di­ate issues and long-range policy vis­ions. They were respons­ib­il­it­ies that seemed to be taken seriously.

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No won­der then that the town has become a habitu­al choice for hol­i­day­makers; and a new or second home for many Amer­ic­an and Cana­dian expat­ri­ates … and Mexicans. 

Trav­el­lers cer­tainly enjoy San Miguel de Allende as evid­enced by the read­ers of Conde Nast Trav­el­ler anoint­ing it the “Best Small City in the World”.

Such a declar­a­tion is hard to argue with. 

Indeed, my wife and I have returned six times since that first visit.

(This “GT” Travel Exper­i­ence is exem­pli­fied and expan­ded upon in my “Good Tour­ism” Insight about the travel & tour­ism industry in The “Good Tour­ism” Blog. [Use the same sign in details for “GT” that you use for “GT” Travel.])

Where is this?

San Miguel de Allende is the prin­cip­al city in the muni­cip­al­ity of San Miguel de Allende, Guanajuato, Mexico.

The coordin­ates used for the pin that rep­res­ents this “GT” Travel Exper­i­ence (on the “GT” Travel map below) point to Par­roquia de San Miguel Arcán­gel, the neo-Goth­ic church over­look­ing El Jardin in the centre of San Miguel de Allende. It’s a land­mark that one can­not miss due to its pink spires.

Toller Cran­ston passed away in Janu­ary 2015. His stu­dio and home is no longer a place one can visit.

Fea­tured image (top of post): Over­look­ing San Miguel de Allende and its pink Par­roquia de San Miguel Arcán­gel. By Steven Buchanan (CC0) via Pixabay.

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