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Paris

Final Day in Paris

by Sasha Stone on October 20, 2009

I don’t know why it’s taking me so long to finish up my Paris trip.¬† Maybe because I can linger on those days before I totally store it away in my memory for the long term.¬† The one really strong memory I’ll have from Paris, and believe me, I already want to go back, is one night Emma and I stayed in the Hotel Foundary and watched Shakespeare in Love in its entirety.¬†¬† We found it on YouTube and watched one part after another in the dark hotel room.¬† It was really great – and I can’t quite pinpoint why it was great – it had nothing to do with Paris particularly.¬† We had one more day and we were wiped out in all possible ways.¬† That was why we chose to hang out in the hotel instead of walking all over the place.

However, there were two places we wanted and needed to see.¬† One was the Catacombs and the other was the Montparnasse cemetery. I wouldn’t want to live in Montparnasse – I like the other side of Paris better, over by the Marais and the Pompidou.

We decided to brave the Metro for the first time to get to the Catacombs and seriously, the Metro is a lot easier than you think.¬† But you can’t bumble around like a dumbass – you have to kind of know what you’re doing.¬† We wasted two tickets going to the wrong side but figured out our mistake the hard way.¬† Once you get it you get it and it isn’t that bad, but god help you if you try to talk to any of the metro workers.¬† The thing about people in Europe in general – they don’t care about you.¬† But it’s especially true in France.¬† They don’t care if you’re having a problem – it is not their problem.¬† That aspect of European travel ALWAYS makes me feel better to be American.¬† I tried to explain one problem I was having to one of the women working behind the glass but she brushed me off with a wave of her hand and a disgusted nod.

I really wanted to leave Paris.¬† I thought I had mistakenly purchased a book of Metro tickets instead of one ticket – turns out I hadn’t but I thought I had. I guess I’m just used to American customer service where they give a damn because it makes a difference to their business.¬† In France, health care is taken care of, wage is decent enough – there is no real competition so why bother?

Eventually, after a few transfers we found ourselves in Montparnasse proper and we headed to the Catacombs.  The line was too long but we waited anyway.  We wanted our last day in Paris to be easy-ish with just one or two things to see.  This seemed like the perfect thing to do.  We had a couple of loudmouthed Americans behind us talking as if they were the only people who existed.  And I suddenly could relate to the Parisiennes hatred of us.

While we waited in line I went and got us a hot dog – one of those great Paris hot dogs with the hot mustard.¬† Oh, those are almost worth the trip back for.¬† Although there are so many things in Paris that call my name, even now.

Once inside the Catacombs you walk down an endless spiral staircase – down and down and down and down. It gets darker and colder and damper.¬† You’re kind of grateful for the crowd because you know if your heart stops suddenly there are people to help you out.¬† You walk a bit before you get to the bones and then it’s just wall upon wall of skulls and bones.¬† It definitely puts one’s existence into perspective the way cemetery’s don’t; this isn’t about honoring an individual life – this is about how many people have come before, lived, had their little dramas and heartbreaks, minor successes, diseases and whatnot, and then died and became bones in a pile.

I couldn’t get out of there fast enough, although it had one upside: it was the only place in Paris so far that did not smell like piss.

Upon our exit, we decided to get a good street crepe, as opposed to the touristy kind.¬† We found one at a small booth in Montparnasse – I got the orange and honey and Emma got the Nutella and banana (that is the one to get).¬† They were delicious, even if they did drip all over us.

Afterwards, we wandered down to the cemetery, but to be perfectly honest, our feet could not take anymore walking.¬† That was that for us.¬† We hobbled over to Jean Paul Sartre’s grave, snapped a photo and then called it a day.

We got up very early, like 4am, in order to take our metro to the airport.  We opted out of the Bee Shuttle because it had been so expensive the ride in.  It was trippy but doable, lugging our suitcases down the cool streets of Paris, sans coffee, down the stairs and occasionally up the stairs.  A nice gentleman helped us up one flight of stairs.  There are kind people everywhere, you just have to be lucky enough to bump into one.

We finally got to the airport but we knew Emma’s passport had been lost there and was in the Lost and Found somewhere.¬† We were told that it didn’t open until after 9am and our flight was to leave around 10am.¬† Emma burst into tears after Security managed to get the Lost and Found opened but alas, no passport.¬† Eventually we just went to our airline and they had her passport all along.

We boarded our plane and without incident, as in “international incident” we were flying out of Paris.¬† Paris is the place of our sweetest dreams, even still.¬† The longer the time between from then and now, the more we mature and grow, our memories filter out the stuff that made the beautiful city agonizing.¬† And all that remains is that unending beauty.¬† Paris captured my heart.¬† I know I will be back there sooner rather than later.¬† And I don’t even care that Paris doesn’t love me back.¬† It’s an unrequited love and that isn’t the worst thing in the world.

The next thing to happen would be three connecting flights on our way back to LA – Paris to Milan, Milan to London, London to Los Angeles.

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Four Days in Paris, Day Three Continued – The Louvre

by Sasha Stone on September 24, 2009

Memories fade if they aren’t retold in some way – either you retell them again and again, sometimes unreliably in your own mind, or else you repeat them to someone, write them down in a journal (I’m really bad at that, but I do write on this blog occasionally) – photographs help greatly.¬† So where were we?¬† We were finding our way, at last, to the Louvre.

We knew we had to go; we didn’t want to go.¬† I knew it was supposed to be big and crowded.¬† Since we got there late in the day, with just two hours to see the whole thing, it wasn’t as crowded as expected.¬† There were late-comers but most had wandered the halls already and seen what they had to see (Mona Lisa and the Venus) and still had time to see everything else.¬† In my mind it was a bunch of old paintings Emma would not like very much, or else be bored looking at.¬† One day she will have the context to really appreciate what she was seeing – this wasn’t going to be that day.¬† We both knew the idea was to go to say we’d gone.

But like everything else in the Paris, the Louvre exceeds expectations on every possible level. It is modern and beautiful and full interesting, non-boring art.¬† The only catch is that you have to have the time and energy to wander around.¬† If you don’t you will be able to say you went but that is all.¬† My advice to anyone going with a younger kid, don’t try to do the Louvre – it will be boring for them.¬† But for a kid 11 and older?¬† Absolutely take them.¬† Give the a camera and let them take pics of the art (non-flash).

We did not have sufficient time and we were already dog tired.¬† It was our third day – we had one more day left and we’d crammed as much tourism as we possible could into those first two days.¬† We were so tired that we both felt like we had been swallowed by a giant whale when we tried to see the Louvre in just a short hour.¬† We ended up parking it at a cafe (not Cafe Marly, which I couldn’t find, alas), for a croissant, a coffee and a hot chocolate.¬† The first drops of rain of the day started to fall.¬† Around us were tired tourists.¬† One woman was laying her head on the table as she waited for her order to be taken. You know how French wait-staff are.¬† They are slightly more motivated to serve Americans because they know we (stupidly) tip them.¬† It is the only (slight) benefit to being an American in Paris.

Emma had ordered an apple tart but got served an eclair instead.¬† That was okay, though.¬† I told her not to bother the waitress about it since it had already taken many long minutes to get served in the first place.¬† I enjoyed my coffee but need I say it again that Italian coffee whips French coffee’s ass – and I’ll say it loudly and proudly that American coffee whips both of their assess if I’m the one making it.¬† Italians corner the market on capuccino, though.¬† You will never find a better one than in Italy. Never.¬†¬† Ever.¬† Paris coffee is okay.¬† It’s perfectly fine. Nothing to write home about, even though here I am writing from home about it.

Sitting in that cafe, surrounded by tourists, in that old and beautiful building, with rain falling outside and a view of Paris around I had another surge of brief happiness about where we were and what we were doing.

There was probably no greater moment for me than that.¬† I spent a fortune, I nearly ruined my life upon arrival back in America, but those brief moments frozen in time in a place where romantic dreams turn into fully blown realities — we were caught in that elusive atmosphere of happiness.

We saw the Mona Lisa – the poor thing. She hardly looks under siege, though.¬† She smiled wrly back at the throngs as if to say – “you can’t touch me; I’m locked away behind glass.”¬† It’s funny – she is like Paris herself.¬† One has to see her – everyone wants to be near her but she’ll always be kind of remote, mocking you with her bemused expression.¬† It’s a strange experience seeing something so famous.¬† The Venus De Milo, like Michelangelo’s David, is breathtaking.

And that was that for the Louvre.¬† We headed out in the rain and found our way back to the shuttle boat where we would attempt to head to the Latin Quarter for dinner — as it turned out, not the smartest idea.¬† I stupidly thought the Latin Quarter was where the students hung out and therefore everything would be cheap.¬† But in August, in Paris, there are no students. Parisians hightail it La Plage and out come the tourist prices.¬† So good luck finding anything cheap in Disneyland – I mean fake Paris, I mean the Latin Quarter.¬† Yes, it is still beautiful, of course, like everything in the city of lights.

We walked and walked and walked and walked and walked and walked and walked through the Latin Quarter trying to find a cheap restaurant.  Our funds were dwindling and they were already borrowed as it was.  I knew we had just the one more day there and we needed enough money to get back to the airport and at last home.  Being broke on your own is one thing. Being broke with a kid in tow is a whole other thing.

She did, however, take a few snaps of the area – they have kid’s eye view:

With the kid in full whine mode about being tired and hungry, we had no choice but to pick this one restaurant.¬† Of course, the kid’s menu was like $12 Euro, which is around $16 or something like that.¬† So Emma tried her luck at a hamburger (it was served Atkins-style, with no bread) and I had some kind of chicken and frites that was just about the most tasty thing I’d ever had in my life.

The real thrill of it, though, was meeting a fellow American who was there hanging out after taking his adoptive son’s brother back to Romania.¬† It was a harrowing story but he and his wife were doing this great and charitable thing.¬† I briefly thought about being ten years younger and child-less and would I sleep with this dude if given the opportunity.¬† I didn’t know the answer but I kind of liked thinking about it.¬† He was attractive, southern, and his eyes undressed every woman that walked by – I figured he was on-the-make.¬† I am pretty much past my sell-by date so it wasn’t even a consideration – but we enjoyed chatting across the small restaurant while fielding angry looks from the Parisians nearby – it was a sign of the times, though, that the restaurant was nearly empty.

Both of us Americans agreed that everything was too expensive and that we both needed to get back to America where things are a tad more manageable.

Dinner was delicious, memorable, expensive.¬† We found our way back to our shuttle bus in the dark and we took our last boat ride down the Seine to the boat’s last stop, the Eiffel Tower.¬† We got out of the boat and walked underneath the lit up Eiffel Tower, which twinkles around 10pm.¬† It is so lovely to walk under – and there are so many people there, even late at night.¬† We wandered down the neighborhood and took our last walk through the park to our hotel.¬† At that hour Paris comes to life – Europeans are funny how they like to eat so late and stay up at night.¬† I guess they must sleep late too.

We made it home and crashed.¬† We had one more day, one more night and then … home.

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Four Days in Paris, Day Three!

by Sasha Stone September 4, 2009 THOUGHTDOM

The Paris in my mind was different from the Paris my daughter and I met.¬† I saw crowded streets full of students and artists bustling around town, a baguette lodged under their arm, a beret perhaps, lots of beautiful women in vintage dresses, somehow music playing softly somewhere, fast little cars zipping around … a rat as a chef… no, of course, I’m describing the Paris in movies.¬† The Paris in movies is not the real Paris, just like the Italy in movies is not the real Italy. If you’re traveling to popular destinations during August you have to prepare for two things.¬† The first is that the locals will have vacated — this is true of most cities in Italy and it is most certainly true of Paris.¬† Those frogs—er, French people—vanish for the seaside because, you know, they can.¬† And so what’s left?¬† Tourists, tourists, tourists, and more [...]

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Four Days in Paris, Day Two

by Sasha Stone August 27, 2009 Travel Time

It isn’t easy conjuring up day two now that I’m back at home in the US.¬† What I do remember is that we left our hotel around 10am and didn’t return until 10:30pm, with every bone in our bodies aching from walking and all of the activity.¬† We really did try to wring out every bit of fun we possibly could, even if fun for an eleven year old is very different than fun for a 44 year-old (or am I forty-five? I can’t even remember anymore, I feel 38). The second day we were determined to get up inside the Eiffel Tower.¬† Well, Emma was – I haplessly tagged along, playing the role of what would ordinarily be the good time father type.¬† Me, I’m not so into taking cramped elevators to the top of anything – I am afraid of heights, for one thing. I hate crowds and [...]

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FOUR DAYS in PARIS! Day One

by Sasha Stone August 23, 2009 Travel Time

We arrived in Paris after a weird night spent in Milan.¬† Unable to find the shuttle from the airport to our hotel (the number for the hotel didn’t work) — and we were so exhausted and hot by that point we had no choice but to take a taxi.¬† The driver loaded our bags and told us it would be 30 euros — for a seven minute drive.¬† A sensible person would have gotten out of the car and looked for a cheaper taxi but with sweat covering every part of our bodies I just couldn’t bear another second of dragging our bags around the airport – this was after an hour of searching for our shuttle.¬† So we coughed up the euros and headed for our hotel.¬† It was a Best Western and for a minute there, as I would many times throughout the trip, appreciate the comforts of [...]

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