Thursday, August 18, 2011

C'est l'heure


















(It's time) Today as I was rushing (running, sweating, and looking very un-chic) to catch the metro to meet friends for a farewell picnic the realization hit, “This is the last time I will be running late in Paris.” Usually I deplore my ineptitude to be punctual but this time it was saddening. The last time? Oh, tragedy! There will be an abundance of “opportunities” to be late in the future but not so many to live in Paris.

It will be lovely to be back in pristine Montana but first here are a few qualities I have saveored and will miss about the City of Light.

1. People have all the time in the world for each other whether they be a friend, colleague or the baker. When you ask how people are they don't bark, “Busy!” They stop, look you in the eye and are truly present.
2. The great people I have met.
3. The art of conversation.
4. Beauty and aesthetics matter in daily life. Flowers on windowsills, a good baguette, an evening stroll.
5. The diversity of cultures, opinions, etc...
6. Speaking French.
7. Art (galleries, architecture, posters, graffiti, street art..)
8. Concerts, museums, ballets, even operas.
9. Old stuff: history, buildings, gates, anything.
10. Public Transportation (bus rides invariably become community conversation hubs)
11. Riding my bike through the streets with library books in the front basket.
12. Walking everywhere.
13. Focus on quality: food (much fewer preservatives), products, small artisan shops.
14. Running along the Seine while booksellers applaud, “Bravo!”, watching the water flow under the Pont du Carrousel or 6am on the Pont Alexandre III. Heck, anything along the Seine River.
15. Living in a place where big current events occur.
16. The beauty of this city.
17. All of the great little neighborhoods and parks.
18. Working on life goals: living in Paris, French fluency.
19. Always something new to explore.
20. Knowing you will have a surprise or challenge every day.


Here are some things that won't be missed!
1. General disgruntlement of all Parisians and love of complaining.
2. Stinky polluted city.
3. Lots of sex. Everywhere.
4. Planning your evening according to when the metro closes.
5. Pigeons. Oh, horrid carriers of pestilence.
6. Dog poop. Wearing open toed shoes is a risk.
7. The stress of living in a city.
8. Always having to be aware.
9. Lunch can last 4 hours.
10. Knowing you will have a surprise or challenge every day.

Jeter














mai 2011
(To throw) “You're going to Paris? You have to throw marshmallows off of the Eiffel Tower!” Hannah exclaimed. Well, I didn't actually throw them off the tower since I was afraid I might kill someone. Marshmallow Manslaughter doesn't sound like fun times. But here are three marshmallows from America and here they are just for you Hannah, Sierra, and Jandi!

Merci, Hemingway

Mai/May 2011
Tonight is a Hemingway night. It's Paris and it is raining outside. Earlier, at the fruitier (fruit shop), after the long bus ride through the puddle of a city, the prim nosed lady at the counter quipped that my bag of apples came to 1,80€. “I don't know if I have that much.” but lo and behold, there it was in my porte-monnaie (wallet). I was as surprised as anyone, for this is Hemingway's Paris where ends barely meet. How he could afford to eat oysters and drink so much liqueur, who knows. I suppose post-war Paris was just different.

That little sack of hard bright apples fit perfectly in the crook of my arm. The lady with the nose seemed relieved that I didn't need another sack to carry it. As I stepped out from under the awning and around the queues of people waiting for their baguette I remembered when I used to work at that gallery down in Bigfork. The people at the grocer used to call me the “girl who never wants a sack.” Watching a girl juggle an armful of groceries must be good enough entertainment in a small town.

But this is a big town and there is always something to see. An old man bundled in a trench coat and plaid was struggling to mount his bike as he crossed the street, one foot on the ground, the other hobbled on the pedal. He was having a bear of a time. His eyes bulged with the effort and his hands were knuckled gray over the handle bars. Was he was smiling or grimacing? I wanted to laugh for his sake but wasn't sure if he thought it was a joke.

But back to the apples and going home. Below my place is a bar where only men hang out. It is the Bar de l'Avenue. They are always there, watching football (soccer) on the TV that hangs in the corner. The barman stands behind the zinc*, wiping tall beer glasses with a great square torchon (dishcloth). He spins the glasses with just a few fingers inside because his hands are too big. The men hunch deeper into their leather jackets when the score gets bad, their cigarette smoke drifting out onto the sidewalk tables. On the other side the cordonnier (leather worker) leans on the door frame of his shop, arms crossed. He avoids my gaze ever since I didn't want to pay him what he asked of me to fix my broken purse.

To get to my place you walk through a dark corridor where the wall's paint is peeling and the smell of mold hangs somberly. I punch in the code on the doorpad in the inner courtyard then push the carved wooden door into the narrow passageway of the foyer. It always smells musty and fishy. Up four flights of creaky wooden stairs where my foot, short as it is, hangs over the edge of the steps. After the spiral I can hear the lady in her apartment facing mine listening to her maghreb (North African) music, which she doesn't turn off until the wee hours of the morning. Sometimes I stumble over at 4am, telling her its just “trop fort” for crying out loud. She politely turns it down. The next night it is the same story all over again.

My studio is small and dingy. Yes, dingy would be a good word for it. Just the place a writer would write a novel. A place where a misstep puts a hole in the floor, everything sits crookedly, and crawlers need to be removed from the bathroom or bed every day.

It is only seven o'clock and I should go out and enjoy this city as gray drifts into night. The Louvre is open late but I feel like staying in. It is the moment to justify turning on the lamp by the window to augment the bare bulb in the wall. Maybe I'll open the window a crack to listen to the rain.

The patter of raindrops falling on the neighbor's terrace gives a little company. As the night grows so do the sounds. The toll of church bells reverberate along the stone buildings of the boulevard and the “bom-pah bom-pah” of sirens bounces down the street. The sound of French sirens is so endearing, the opposite of their task. After the ambulance passes, the whizz of car tires cuts efficiently through pools in the street.

I've fished out one of the apples and savor the crunch of it. It is crisp and tart, cleaving away decisively.

It's a good night, you know. Paris is not always so kind. Many people come visit but much fewer come to live. There is a reason for that.

Hemingway wrote, “If you are lucky enough to have lived in Paris as a young man, then wherever you go for the rest of your life it stays with you, for Paris is a moveable feast.”

In saying this, he answered my hopes and fears. It is good to be here. While it is sad to go there is no need to fear. Paris is such a place that even if you leave, its personality will grow in your soul like an apple seed, rooted and determined to never leave your memory of experience.

Living in Paris is not always easy yet it is rich. It is a gift and I'd like to think I have learned a thing or two along the way. Now it's black outside and there is nothing to see except my own reflection in the glass. It's time to close the window. Goodnight.

*The zinc refers to the traditional practice of using zinc for bar counter tops.

If you would like to explore my neighborhood:
1. Click this link: Google Maps.
2. Enter in: 88 Avenue de Saint-Mandé 75012 Paris, France
3. Select Street View.

Journal Intime: le 23 janvier 2011

(Journal Entry January 23, 2011) I recently came across this journal entry from earlier this year. It is a fun story and perhaps you will enjoy it. It is unedited so forgive the excessive descriptive words and run on sentences. When I write for myself I put all of the words I like in!

“Tonight in the metro there was a man playing a guitar at Champs-Élysées Clemenceau (metro stop). At first I thought he was a homeless man because there was a rolling grocery basket before him and he was crouched on the floor. But the music made me notice him. Only a few strums made me know I wanted to put some euros in his little hammered metal pot he had wired to the basket. It was beautiful. Gorgeous. It was played so lovingly. So tenderly. I couldn't quite place the music. Spanish? South American? It was so lovely I sat and stayed while my train went through, so as to listen for five more minutes. It was one of those moments where I looked all around me at the tiled metro walls, the gray steel beams overhead, and then the reflection of my hand and cheekbones in the glass of the automatic barrier of the metro. I was seated on the the new trendy chairs they have been installing – lacquered white with the smile shaped slit in the back. 'Kadyn, this is your life. You are used to all of this.' Amazing.

I kept returning to this man and his guitar. Too bad he doesn’t have a cd. It was the kind of guitar music I like the most – Spanish inspired, with some lilting, soft, tender refrains, other dark, soothing reverberations, lots of finger picking, and then bright and intricate melodies interweaving together. There's something about a man and a guitar. It's so classic. Picasso even painted it. I am not talking about the guys who start playing the guitar to get chicks. You know, the ones who play the same stupid chords over again with the same stupid strumming pattern over again, that sing with their eyes closed as if they've got so much soul but can't quite get their voice in sync or in tune with what they're squeezing out of their guitars. Oh I know, I went to a liberal arts school, after all. I'm well acquainted with this sort.

No, I am talking about the men who cradle their guitars and sing with it like they would an old friend, meeting through thick and thin.
Like this man in the metro. With every refrain and stanza he played you couldn't help but hear how much he loved to play. It was so intimate, so loving. You felt like you'd walked around a hedge in a garden and accidentally interrupted a private conversation between two old friends. You feel sheepish but relish, even if for just that small moment, the comfort that emanates from two that share a history.

One minute was left before the next train would come. I hated to interrupt his musical reverie but something drove me to talk to this man. As I approached he could tell I had a question. 'Your music, where does it come from? What countries inspired it?'

'Oh, it's from everywhere. Spain-' and then my train came, blustering out all noise, but I think one of the places he said was Morocco. I told him, shouted rather, to be heard that I found his playing to be very good, then ran to get on the train.

I looked back at him, an older man with faded blond hair, a yellow guitar, with his knobby knees up high before him since he was sitting on the low concrete ledge playing his guitar. A black umbrella laid next to him, unfastened, and seemed a little useless. No rain could ever dare fall on such a melody...

Well, that was such a sweet end to my day. Lord, thank you so much for this time. I know this is blessed, sacred time - not because I am here in Paris, but because you are working in me while I am here. I feel like I'm living out something of great significance but that I can't quite put my finger on it. Either way, thank you so much. I know someday I'll look back on this time with bittersweet longing. I'll forget all of the hard stuff and just remember the romance.”

Tomber Amoureux


(To fall in love.) Well, Corsica was just as beautiful as anticipated. The people were warm, chatting it up without any rush. If a winsome local gentleman had asked for my hand and to live the rest of our days on this sun-kissed alpine studded jewel in the sea, I would have been hard pressed to utter anything save a southern accented “oui”. The culinary penchant for sausage and all things milk-based would have presented the only setback. Don't worry. I still have both of my hands.


Instead, Katie and I enjoyed the fruits of being young independent women.


We swam in the ocean with the jellyfish (yikes!), sipped wine with toes in the sand, and bronzed ourselves appropriately.


We meandered the streets of centuries old cliff-side cities, risked our lives on fast paced mountain roads and desert landscapes, and nearly froze to death sleeping on mountain passes.


Katie learned that Europeans eat late, Mediterranean men are quite friendly, and that sanitary standards differ from America.


All in all, it was a very good trip. It was another reminder that this big wide world is well worth discovering.