The Immigrant Perspective

Episode 5: Finding Shelter in Sound: Horacio’s Story

56 min · 8. apr. 2026
episode Episode 5: Finding Shelter in Sound: Horacio’s Story cover

Description

Horacio grew up in Sonsonate, El Salvador during a civil war. When his mother left for the US in 1981, he was six years old, and he wouldn't live with her again for eleven years. In the silence she left behind, he found the Beatles. In this episode, Horacio shares how music became his refuge, what it was like to land in Miami as a teenager who didn't speak English, the surprising prejudice he encountered from other Hispanic immigrants, and how he eventually built a life in Atlanta with his American wife and twin daughters, named Sadie and Eleanor, after Beatles songs. Horacio's memoir, Finding Shelter in Sound, is available now. You can find him on Instagram at findingshelterinsound. Have a story to share? Reach out at reallyfrompod.com [http://reallyfrompod.com].

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9 episodes

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Episode 9: Home is Where I Am

What does home mean when you've lived in two countries, moved around a lot, and built a life far from where you started? For my younger sister, Laurie, the answer is simple: home is just where she is. Laurie was seven when the Mangan family left Kilkee, a small beach town on the west coast of Ireland, and landed in Southeast Tennessee. She is the youngest of five siblings, and her immigrant experience may be the most quietly radical of all of them. She doesn't romanticize Ireland. She doesn't feel particularly nostalgic. And she hasn't been back since 2009. In this conversation, the sisters talk about what they each remember from those final weeks in Ireland, arriving in the American South for the first time, being picked on at school for their accents and their short hair, and the very different ways they've each made sense of leaving a country they didn't choose to leave. Also: a stink bomb, a potential house buyer, and one sister hiding behind a bathroom door while the other took the fall.

Yesterday23 min
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Laura Contreras-Alanis arrived in the United States in 1974 - a little girl from Michoacán, Mexico, told she was going to Disneyland. What followed was anything but a fairy tale: migrant farm work in Central California, multiple moves as a teenager, dropping out of high school, a painful estrangement from her family, and eventually - decades later - a U-Haul headed to Knoxville, Tennessee, with five kids, a terrified-of-flying husband, and a grandmother's passing along the way. In this conversation, Laura shares the full arc: the privileged childhood in Mexico where everyone knew her name, the culture shock of apartment life in California, the years she spent deliberately distancing herself from her Mexican identity as a form of self-protection, and the slow, tender return to her roots. She talks about the "un trastorno princesa" her sister teases her about, the brother who simply got out of the car in Knoxville one day and never went back to California, and what it means to become a citizen by choice - not by default. Laura is warm, funny, and searingly honest. This one stays with you.

29. apr. 20261 h 17 min
episode Episode 5: Finding Shelter in Sound: Horacio’s Story artwork

Episode 5: Finding Shelter in Sound: Horacio’s Story

Horacio grew up in Sonsonate, El Salvador during a civil war. When his mother left for the US in 1981, he was six years old, and he wouldn't live with her again for eleven years. In the silence she left behind, he found the Beatles. In this episode, Horacio shares how music became his refuge, what it was like to land in Miami as a teenager who didn't speak English, the surprising prejudice he encountered from other Hispanic immigrants, and how he eventually built a life in Atlanta with his American wife and twin daughters, named Sadie and Eleanor, after Beatles songs. Horacio's memoir, Finding Shelter in Sound, is available now. You can find him on Instagram at findingshelterinsound. Have a story to share? Reach out at reallyfrompod.com [http://reallyfrompod.com].

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