Patricia Pardo and Chistian Gálvez welcomed their first child together, Luca, on December 22. Although the baby’s arrival was scheduled for early January, the little one came a few days early, becoming the best Christmas gift for the couple. Since then, the presenting couple has been immersed in caring for the family’s youngest and adapting to this new stage as parents.
In addition, the couple also had to temporarily put aside their professional career on the small screen. Pardo temporarily left her position in the program Vamos a ver on December 1. And after almost three months off work, the presenter returned to work this past Monday.
”I’m excited, nervous. A mix between excitement, happiness and sadness because it is as if your heart was ripped out and you left it at home. And I’m looking forward to coming back,” declared the presenter. Furthermore, Christian Gálvez’s wife claimed that returning to Telecinco had been harder for her than for those who stayed at home. ”They have sent me a few videos and photos of my child, and so far I think he is doing very well. “I’m not so good, but good,” she noted.
For his part, Christian Gálvez continues to do the work of a new father, as we have seen through his social networks, where he has not stopped sharing content about his little Luca. This Wednesday, the Telecinco presenter published on his Instagram profile a tender image with his son in his arms, accompanied by the poem Itaca by Konstantino Kavafis.
”When you undertake your trip to Itacapide, may the road be long, full of adventures, full of experiences. Do not fear the Laestrygonians or the Cyclopes or the wrathful Poseidon, such beings you will never find in your path, if your thinking is elevated, if the emotion that touches your spirit and your body is select. You will not find the Laestrygonians nor the Cyclops nor the savage Poseidon, if you do not carry them within your soul, if your soul does not raise them before you. It asks for the path to be long. May there be many summer mornings in which you arrive – with what pleasure and joy! – to ports never seen before,” he began writing.
”Always have Ithaca in your mind. Getting there is your destiny. But never rush the trip. Better that it last for many years and dock, as an old man, on the island, enriched by everything you earned on the road without putting up with Ithaca enriching you. Ithaca gave you such a beautiful trip. Without it you would not have started the path. But she no longer has anything to give you. Even if you find it poor, Ithaca has not deceived you. Thus, wise as you have become, with so much experience, you will now understand what the Ithacas mean,’ the presenter concluded the poem with which he intended to reflect on the importance of enjoying the path of life.