Showing posts with label metro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label metro. Show all posts

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Last Paris video...for now

I finally made myself sit down and create my last monthly video of my thirteen months in Paris. Normally I would have them finished and posted on the first of the month, but this time I just couldn't get myself to put it together knowing this was the last of my footage and the last memories I'll have of Paris...until next time.

Love,
Rachel

Friday, October 17, 2014

Published on 'A Woman's Paris'

My article "Two for the Road" (originally posted here on my blog) was recently published in two parts (Part One and Part Two) on the Minneapolis-based Paris publication, A Woman's Paris! In the article, I document Paris's rich sociological diversity as I cross the city from west to east on the métro's line two.

I've never been published in any way other than my own blog before, so I'm thrilled about the opportunity and look forward to making future contributions to the website. I'm particularly excited to contribute to something stemming from Minnesota, because us seemingly-quiet Midwesterners (Or should I say 'Northerners'?) deserve to have our voices heard in travel!

Rachel

Saturday, August 30, 2014

Bright Lights, Bigger City




After living in France for quite a while—a whole year, in fact—I’ve grown pretty used to being an American in Paris. My French has improved drastically (even though I’m usually shy about it), to the point where I’m able to understand voicemails in French—something that I just shrugged my shoulders at when I studied abroad. I could draw a fairly accurate map of the métro without cheating and I could navigate the city in my sleep (Largely thanks to my Vélib’ bike share subscription—biking around Paris is incredible and has honestly changed my life). Beyond the basics of speaking (albeit, with non-fluency) and commuting, I also have a pretty good grasp on some cultural essentials—I don’t speak-scream anymore like all good Americans do in public, I wear almost exclusively shades of black and I know what constitutes good bread (Moi, I prefer baguettes de tradition, or simply tradis: they’re shorter, denser baguettes that are government-regulated for quality and are usually still warm from the oven). Most days, I’m comfortable being, as my favorite pizza-maker at Pernety calls me, the Américaine. I get a thrill out of living somewhere that isn’t like home in Minnesota; Paris feels like home in a different way.

And then I went to London.

Buying my tickets four days in advance, I spent a long weekend in London visiting Matt (He left Paris for a summer program there) at the end of July. For the price of an average dinner in Paris, I bought bus tickets through Eurolines (A European equivalent to the Megabus—in every way) and spent eight hours driving the same route as the Eurostar in roughly four times the timespan. I look forward to the day when I cease to carry a student visa and can afford to travel based on convenience concerns rather than budget ones.

I hadn’t left France in months and hadn’t been in an English-speaking country in over half a year, so I felt quite dépaysée. I was suddenly terrified by the prospect of ordering food, had no idea how the Tube worked or how to act on it and had an almost harder time understanding people speaking to me than I do back in Paris (Almost. Let’s not be ridiculous, we were all speaking English after all). I was back in the Anglo-Saxon World of Rules and Order—the sidewalks were suspiciously clean, and a few stores we went into wouldn’t sell alcohol after a certain time on Sunday.  Maybe it’s because London is seventeen times the size of Paris land-wise and thus has a lower population density, but the city also felt much quieter and reserved in places whose Parisian counterparts would be raucous at this time of year.

I’d been to London before eight years ago, so I didn’t feel any pressure to see anything in particular, continuing that lazy-but-it's-okay attitude towards traveling that I’d picked up in Nice. Matt and I mainly walked around—and with that whole London-is-seventeen-times-bigger-than-Paris thing, it was a lot of walking. I was happy to have a few new experiences, like eating authentic fish and chips from Fishcothèque (I never had it last time!), strolling through the dainty neighborhoods near Hyde Park and looking at art—and, suffering a bout of museum delirium, disrespectfully mocking most of it—in the National Gallery and the Tate Modern. We bought a baguette and beer for a Hyde Park picnic, drank wine I’d brought from France in Trafalgar Square, and picked up fruit in the Borough Market for breakfast. It was fun to hang out in a city that is almost exactly like America for a weekend, but it confirmed to me that Paris is the city for me, with its unmatched beauty, its livelinessand its dog shit-encrusted sidewalks.  

Maybe see you in another eight years, London.

Rachel






























Friday, July 18, 2014

Paris When It Sizzles



"C'est chaud," my boulanger says to me as he wraps up my baguette de tradition. I count out my euro and twenty centimes and look up. He's staring at me and I realize he'd said something to me. "Comment?" I ask. "C'est chaud, la journée," he repeats. He's telling me that today is hot. I look back at him, expressionless, and nod or maybe even say "yeah" in English since my brain feels as foggy as the air that's hanging over the city. I walk out and wonder to myself why he'd point out something so awfully obvious.

I once fondly wrote about my apartment, which is called hell a chambre de bonne, a tiny room at the top of a Parisian apartment building just beneath the gray mansard rooftop. It offers several advantages, such as much lower rent, a great view of the city and a built-in workout every time I leave and come back up my seven flights of stairs. And in the summer?

It is a nightmare.



Today, it hit 97 degrees. This heat wave, or canicule as they call it, has turned my beloved Paris into, quite frankly, overall suffering. Since air-conditioning in France is something I've only encountered in hotels and grocery stores (And I'm all for the energy-saving benefit of not climate-controlling everything), I walked up the desert wasteland of boulevard Saint-Michel to Monoprix and purchased an overpriced fan.


I carried that giant box twenty five minutes back up the boulevard which I've noticed now wafts a nice, warm dog shit smell and past people who still could not part with their scarves or jackets, while I kept stopping to adjust my sunglasses that were slipping off my nose. They watched me in my shorts and tank top as if I were insane, but you cannot tell me that people who wear their puffy winter jackets when it is above 70 degrees are not either: A. Boiling hot and too stubborn to admit it, or are B. In scientific terms, batshit crazy. I've even seen people running in long pants and sweatshirts. It takes a lot of self-restraint to not scream at them when I see this happening. Parisians will be Parisians.


I've spent the last two days laying in the middle of my floor, water dribbling from my mouth, and wondering if I'll make it out of this alive. My plants are dying. I can't work on my thesis. I wonder if this new fan is making it cooler or just spreading more hot air. Flies are moving in to my apartment (Do they think it's cooler in here?). I wonder if closing my windows and curtains is better than opening them. My dishes and jars of peanut butter are hot to the touch. 

If I ever had any advice to give to tourists coming to visit Paris in the summer, I'd say wait until September. October, even. Let it get cold because this city just can't cool itself down.

And I know people are hot because I can smell them on the métro. Instead, I'll be walking until further notice. I'm not sentencing myself to that torture.

Melting,
Rachel

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

June

When I go about making my videos each month, I usually just choose a song that I've been listening to a lot that I estimate will be the right length for the amount of footage I have once it's been cut down considerably. I'd been listening to "Café Lights" by Hey Marseilles a lot and it seemed to fit for the amount of clips I had and it has some stereotypical accordion music in it--perfect for Paris, right? It ended up making for an unintentionally and borderline-depressing video because it features my best friends in Paris who have all left our great city this month. I didn't mean for it to come off quite so melodramatic, but enjoy it anyway!

Back to thesis writing,
Rachel

Sunday, May 11, 2014

New Videos




There & Back
Created for a final presentation in my Cultural Translation Workshop, this is a video translation of the last academic year of my life between Paris and Minneapolis. With over an hour of footage to narrow down, I chose clips depicting the constant movement and restlessness of living in two places, which can result simultaneously in both excitement and loneliness. No matter where I live, in Paris or in Minneapolis, my heart is always missing the other.



April
My regular monthly video for April, including visiting Fontainebleau, running the The Color Run 5K, visiting Annecy and Geneva with my sister, hiking on my birthday in the Alps and, of course, regular life in Paris.

Thursday, March 20, 2014

Istanbul, Crete & Athens


“If you’re 22, physically fit, hungry to learn and be better, I urge you to travel—as far and as widely as possible. Sleep on floors if you have to. Find out how other people live and eat and cook. Learn from them – wherever you go.”
- Anthony Bourdain

*     *     *

ISTANBUL




     California knows how to party. 2Pac is louder than the fifteen other voices in the shuttle as the headlights light up one of those universal green road signs: "İstanbul" with a white arrow. In the city of L.A. Mounds of apartment buildings crop up in the blackness around us. Where are we? The driver next to me drives with one arm, the other clutching his phone that he shouts into, pausing every so often to assure me that my backpack that keeps shifting over the emergency break "is okay." He makes no attempt to alter his driving as we shoot through an automatic toll. In the city of Compton. Neon corporation signs like Toyota light the way as the city grows denser. Minarets spear the sky. We keep it rockin'. What's better than the first glimpses of a new country? We keep it rockin'.

     I'd never been so far away from home before I went to Istanbul the last week of February. The past few weeks since then have been so congested with midterms and the onset of unseasonably good weather in Paris that I've put off writing about it until now. For the last spring break of my life, I traveled with my friend Rebecca and her two friends from Notre Dame who are teaching English in France, Allison and Kelsey. Uncharacteristically, I let the others organize most of the trip. The night before we left, I packed and watched a few videos in a last-ditch effort to learn at least one word in Turkish. I hadn't been to a non-Francophone, non-Anglophone country in almost two years, so I wanted to make an effort rather than assume that the whole world speaks English (When people say that, I want to scream). But damn, Turkish is a lot harder for an English speaker than French. Overall, I can only recognize 'thank you' when it's written down, but I can't tell you how it's spelled or how it's pronounced. I can also recognize rakı and nargile, but that's only from experience, not from any conscious effort.

    Feelings of that great French word dépaysement ran high, the feeling of complete disorientation in a foreign environment. I’d never been in a country where I physically and culturally stick out so much and there’s really no way in hell that I can be mistaken for a local. I couldn’t decipher any of the language written on signs or maps, had not a clue about the layout of the city, didn’t know what Turkish people ate or drank or did with their time, didn’t know how to get plastic tokens for the tram, didn’t know anything about Istanbul. I only knew about Islam, kebabs, the Bosphorus and Liam Neeson being a sixty-year-old badass in Taken 2. The city just never occurred to me. It’s probably the most humbling experience to be among thirteen million people you know nothing about and who don't know much about you either. This is one of the reasons I want the career that I do in study abroad; encouraging young Americans to have experiences out of their tight isolated bubbles can only be the start to overturn how we’re perceived (And I’ve certainly heard some not-so-positive words in my time abroad). We are woefully underprepared for the future and most of the world, believe it or not, is not a replica of the United States.

     At our hostel in the Sultanahmet neighborhood—the tourist epicenter surrounding the Blue Mosque and the Hagia Sophia—I met a pilot from Ohio named Austin who’d been traveling through Africa for weeks. He was so grateful to be back in a Western country again. This struck me because I’d never been somewhere so completely different from anywhere I’d been in “the West.” What is “the West” anyway? Can it be defined with borders? What makes a place “Western” or “non-Western”? I thought about that a lot during those four days in that city where East meets West and I don't have any answers.

     On our first full day, Sunday, we took a long boat tour to the tiny fishing village of Anadolu Kavağı—the very first time I’d ever been in Asia! We chose a fresh sea bass and had it cooked for us for lunch and then climbed up to the Yoros kalesi, a castle in ruins with a panoramic view of Istanbul on one side and the Black Sea on the other.

    On Monday and Tuesday, we went into the New Mosque, the Spice Bazaar, the Topkapi Palace, the Basilica Cistern, the Blue Mosque, the Hagia Sophia and the Grand Bazaar, where I remembered what a pleasure it is to barter. It rained. It was cold. I had wishfully packed things like a swimsuit, sunscreen and a light jacket—half-thinking that Google Images is real-time photography of the current weather—instead of a warm coat and sweaters. None of the tourist sites were heated as far as I could tell, so I channeled my brave inner Minnesotan and sucked it up.

    The highlight of our time in Turkey was when we were fortunate to see Istanbul with a local, Atıl, the brother of a friend in Paris. Over two days, he brought us to his university, Taksim Square, coffee shops, tea gardens, rooftop bars, most of which were in non-tourist areas far from the city center, while introducing us to rakı, ayran, chai tea, Turkish coffee, salep and nargile. It was so much fun to have an authentic experience in this city I knew nothing about. I’ve never had so much tea in my entire life.

     Inside the Hagia Sophia, I said I never wanted to leave Istanbul. While I was almost certainly under the influence of just having held a cat in my lap, I was only partially kidding. The city was full of delicious food, reasonable prices (Hear that, Paris?), incredible culture and the nicest people I’ve met in Europe. I’ll be back.



Lunch in Anadolu Kavağı

Black Sea
Yoros kalesi


Basilica Cistern

Hagia Sophia
The Grand Bazaar
Hagia Sophia
My first tea in years.


CRETE

    

     It always starts off with a car here. Greece is the only foreign country I've driven in and I love it. With less than two minutes of paperwork, instructions and a seventy-euro fee (last time no one even asked for a valid driver's license), we sped away from the airport in Heraklion along cliffs in our tiny red Toyota, elated to have a touch of American freedom usually stunted by the practicality of the Paris métro (Not that I've ever wanted to sit behind the wheel in Paris. Ever.). Orange sellers in shacks dotted the highway along the north coast en route to the Venetian port city of Rethymnon and I thought, what if I quit grad school and sold oranges on a Greek island? I'm still holding that as an option.
   
     Our hostel was in the Old Town of Rethymnon and not accessible at all by car. The only worker was a little day-drunk and had holes in his pants, but hey, no judgment. We didn't stay in our hostel really at all other than to sleep and use the outdoor showers, which was a little unsettling knowing Holes-In-His-Pants was floating around somewhere. We ran to the port to catch the one Cretan sunset we'd see on this trip and had dinner along the water with "a dessert on the house" which was fruit and ouzo, neither of which are dessert in my vocabulary, but are always welcomed. And we saw stars- in the sky. I can't remember the last time I saw those.

     The next day, I drove us west to Georgioupolis to go horseback riding. The "road" up to the ranch was more of what I'd imagine the ground to look like after a giant avalanche goes by. Water from puddles washed up over the hood and it's a miracle that I didn't lose any teeth on the steering wheel. A Belgian named Kristi greeted us enthusiastically outside the stable and within a few minutes we were on horses. The last time I rode a horse, I think I was three and it was a pony. But it didn't matter. I got so used to it that I can only describe as like driving a car that has opinions. We rode down the mountain through a river, olive groves, mulberry trees, lemon trees, a marina and the little town of Georgioupolis. It was so peaceful to feel the sun on my face, the scent of olives in the air, and have no technology in my hands. I may live in a big city, but I think my heart is in these sorts of quiet places.


Fortress of Rethymnon






Georgioupolis

Georgioupolis

Georgioupolis



Rethymnon



ATHENS


     There are few things that I hate more than alarms. The intercom on the ferry jolted us up only a few hours after I'd fallen asleep and the sky was still black. I have no idea what time it was. Normally, if I have no engagements for the day, I'll sleep until the afternoon, so this was just unpleasant. We threw our shit together and took the train into Athens to the touristy Plaka neighborhood. Thankfully the others weren't so anti-morning and were able to navigate. I, on the other hand, napped the first chance I got.
    
     At the Acropolis, I was denied my customary EU student discount, even though I showed the bitch woman working my EU student visa. She wanted to see my student ID. What is more official than a sticker stamped by the French government in my passport issued by the American government? Apparently the plastic card with a worn-off picture of me that I left in Paris. Every other place in Europe has accepted my visa. I'm the type to just eat a raw steak even if I ordered it well-done, so it was surprising even to me when I started raising my voice at the employees and saying things I shouldn't have. But she shouldn't have denied me. 

   I'll never forget the first time that I saw the Eiffel Tower and wondered why it was brown and not black like I'd pictured. Something is always a little off when you see famous sites in person for the first time. Standing beside the Parthenon, it looked exactly how I'd pictured it but then again, not at all. Was it bigger? Smaller? Older? Newer? I still don't think what I saw has registered in me.

     We went to the new Acropolis Museum nearby and tagged along behind a tour group with bodyguards who we presumed were EU delegates in town. Overwhelmed by statues and dates and facts and pottery, we left in a state of straight-up delirium. We drank coffee and shopped and ate dinner for the rest of the evening in the company of traditional Greek music. Or something like that. I was tired.

     Rebecca and I were the last two to stay on until Saturday and we had the day to explore, just the two of us. So we drank and ate and drank and shopped and climbed Mount Lycabettus and talked and laughed and drank. It was a perfect good ending to our week of travel.





At the Acropolis


The Parthenon

Acropolis

Acropolis



If you read till the end, congratulations. It was long, and I apologize. For all of my pictures, head to my Flickr.

Love,
Rachel