TRAPPED BENEATH MADRID
Photo Journalism
Published Story
Reported on the massive power outage that affected Spain. Published externally, this story centered on the human experience of disruption and adaptation.
Surviving the Day the City Went Dark
I was on my way to my 1 p.m. class, chatting on the phone with my mum about the job interview I had scheduled later that day. As the metro rumbled between Opera and Santo Domingo, it suddenly jerked to a halt.
My call with my mum cut off mid-sentence.
The driver’s voice crackled over the intercom: “Just a few minutes, everyone. We seem to be having some troubles.”
We waited. Five minutes. Ten. Fifteen. Twenty. My anxiety started to build.
My whole body tingled as I hyperventilated. Strangers rallied around me — pressing on pressure points, giving me water, elevating my legs — desperate attempts to calm me.
It felt like hours. Then, at last, security pried open what I assume was the emergency door. We began moving single file into the tunnel, our phone flashlights lighting the dark. I was shaking so much I could barely make it down the stairs.
I mustered my bravest voice: “No, I’m good.”
Above ground, the situation was chaotic.
No service. No communication. No idea what to do.
Even if they were home, there was no way to reach them.
I frantically kept calling my mum while navigating the sea of people, but the calls kept dropping.
By the time I reached Plaza de España, I managed to get on a packed bus — only to start panicking again.
It was so crammed, barely moving. I hyperventilated again. I had to get off.
At that moment, I decided: I would walk.
Finally, relief: I spotted girls from SLU Madrid — people I knew. I collapsed into their arms, crying. They told me classes were cancelled and offered me refuge in a nearby apartment where other students had gathered. I accepted without hesitation.
I walked with the group toward Plaza Mayor and then split off alone, heading to Retiro, where I live. It was a 30-minute walk. I had no other choice.
At my local “chino,” where I’ve been going for four years, I filled a basket with drinks and snacks, thinking they’d trust me to pay later. But when I got to the counter: “No, no. Only cash.”
Luckily, a kind stranger lent me €10 and gave me his number to pay him back later. I nearly cried again.
Back at home, we raced through the apartment looking for flashlights and radios.
As the day got later, we realized we were hungry — and had almost no cash.
We scrounged every coin we could find: two, five, and ten-cent pieces, wrapping them in plastic to organize €1 bundles.
Traffic was still gridlocked, yet some drivers kept honking — as if radios hadn’t told them the power outage was national. I felt a flash of anger at their obliviousness.
At the supermarket, a long line snaked outside. We waited 30 to 40 minutes, unsure if we’d even be able to buy anything with our coins.
A kind shop assistant helped us piece together a small haul: a loaf of bread, some ham, cheese, and chorizo. We were a few cents short, but they let us go, a small act of kindness that felt enormous.
With the generosity of strangers and the resilience of the city around us, we returned home and celebrated our modest victory — making sandwiches, playing rounds of Uno and Gin Rummy, and listening to the hopeful crackle of voices on the hand radio.
As darkness fell, we lit candles and prepared for a long night. But just as we settled in, the lights flickered back on. Power returned — and even more crucially for me, so did cellphone service.
The first thing I did was call my mum.
I needed her to know: I was safe. I had survived the day Madrid went dark.
- Top Communication Student – SLU-Madrid (Class of 2025)
- "El Madrileño Way" Photojournalism Exhibition – 4 Selected Works
(2025)
- Dean’s List – SLU-Madrid (2021–2025)
- Published in Madrid Metropolitan
(2024 The Madrid Blackout)
- Head of Photography - Start Studios Madrid
(2025-Present)
Saint Louis University – Madrid Campus
Bachelor of Arts in Communication
Graduated: May 2025
laracmitchell03@gmail.com
+34624427600
@larascamerajourney
LinkedIn: Lara Mitchell Guirao
Lara Mitchell Guirao 2025