It's a Busy Life

It's a Busy Life

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Paris Metro

When I first moved here I vowed to find ways to avoid using Paris' underground transportation system, known here as the Metro. Subways have always reminded me of those ant farms some kids had when I was younger, hundreds of tiny creatures moving from one place to another through a series of tunnels. I really detested the idea of joining the swarms of people crammed into the train cars that carried them to unknown destinations. But low and behold, the time constraints of waiting for a bus, transferring several times and then additional walking to reach a place, have helped me to form a new attitude about "taking the metro." So, every Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday mornings, plus many other times during any given week, I join others coming from every direction as I rush to get to school. I take the line #1 from the Bastille three stops to Chatelet, one of the busiest stations in the heart of Paris, transfer there to the line #4 in the direction of Porte d'Orleans to the Alesia station. Here I walk or catch a bus to the international school run by the city government of Paris. After class I reverse myself and return home by 1:30 to eat lunch.
I always think of the subway as a whole other city that exits directly below the Parisian streets so famous the world over. First of all, there are constantly thousands of people down there buzzing from one location to another. One can shop for many of the same things that can be found above ground. Larger stations always have fresh produce and fast food places, as well as magazine/newspaper stalls, but you can also find jewelry, camera, phone, clothing and other types of shops. The smells in the subway also mimic the exterior world where you can cross into neighborhoods where fresh bread is baking or beer is being brewed, however, with a great amount of difference between the types of smells above/down below. The strongest. and one no one forgets, is the ubiquitous smell of urine. At first, I used to ask the question, who pees in here so much? Until one day I saw a man with his dog (oh and the French do love their dogs who accompany them everywhere) and the dog was lifting his leg right on the wall of the platform where I was waiting for the train. But the most memorial afternoon was when Gabriella and I had just entered a station to catch a train back to our apartment and we noticed a very tall young man facing the wall of the tunnel. As we got closer we noticed he was holding his "thing" and peeing into the little trough that borders both sides of most tunnel walkways. As each person would pass him, he would look directly at him/her and say "Désolé!" (Sorry!) Well, you certainly can't fault the French for being overly polite! After those episodes, I stopped wondering where the pee smells came from.
There are always tons of surprises in the subway and those can either interest or amuse you or make you question reality itself. It's home to many homeless people, some of whom are mentally unstable, some of whom are alcoholic, or some of whom are just down on their luck. There are beggars who sit in certain locations day-after-day with their hands out and they become as familiar as the posters that line the walls advertising exhibits, movies events, stores, etc. Most people don't talk to each other in the metro, sort of like the quiet moments we experience in elevators with the strangers who cram in with us. One can always hear groups traveling together because they do talk to each other, mostly loud and a lot in English. But there are moments of stranger-to-stranger interactions, mostly when someone offers another his/her seat or a woman needs help getting her baby carriage up the steps. My favorite people in the subway are the many musicians who either set up in certain locations like big intersections or at the end of long hallways or the ones who directly board a car to play a few tunes between stops. One can hear any type of music from classical to hiphop but I've notice that the majority of music is traditional and comes from all over the world. The sound of these musicians never fails to lift my spirits or to brighten the drab subway environment so I always try to keep coins in my pocket to drop in their boxes, hats, cups, instrument cases or other creative containers for these are truly hard working do-gooders.
It's quite liberating to live without a car, especially in a place where traffic is always jammed, where vehicles disregard the lines that separate lanes, where everyone is in a hurry, where most streets end at round-a-bouts making logical navigation impossible, and where motorcycles constantly squeeze between lanes to get ahead of the line. One of these days, I'll describe what it's like to ride my bike in Paris, which I do often.

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Birthday Dinner

For my birthday dinner on Monday, I chose to go to a pure vegetarian Indian restaurant, Knishna Bhavan, at 21/24 rue Cail near the Gare de Nord. (Unfortunately, there's no website available.) This is a very small, completely informal place that serves great simple Indian cuisine. The menu has a wide selection of the fast dishes that you find in southern India such as dosas, but I especially like fermented rice bread called idli that is usually served with sambar, soup. I got the house thaali that comes on the large metal dish that has several little compartments for small portions of different dishes. Gabriella and I had invited our friends Adele and Bruce to join us so after eating we all walked back to their apartment where we had champagne and a delicious chocolate cherry cake from a bakery down the street from us on Faubourgh St. Antoine. It was a very simple but lovely evening and we were back home before 11:30pm.

Monday, January 18, 2010

Birthday e-card

Tom, a friend here in Paris, sent this to me today since it's my birthday....and the day I am officially qualified to get my Social Security from the States....YIPEE!!!  I never thought that 62 would feel so good.  I will write more after I get back from my birthday dinner. 

Sunday, January 17, 2010

Market, Tiffany Exh. etc


It's Sunday afternoon and I'm just getting ready to do my French homework, argh! I got up late this morning 10:30, had a little breakfast then went out to shop at the Sunday market at the Bastille. Each Thursday and Sunday, vendors of fresh fruits, vegetables, fish, meat, cheeses, etc as well as all sorts of clothing, jewelry and other commercial items set up along the green space in the center of the rue de Richard Lenoirs. Gabriella requested fresh pasta for lunch so I had to go there to one of the booths that sells Italian specialties to get it. Normally, I would go to our groceries Monopris or 'Frankpris but those are closed on Sundays--yes, it's true that the establishments close here on Sunday still. Kind of nice not to see stores constantly pressured to be open 24/7. Refreshing albeit at time inconvenient but we manage as does everyone else. I ended up getting the pasta, apples, clementines, bananas, walnuts, lettuce, cucumbers, tomatoes, peppers, and a fresh baguette at a boulanger on the way home. When shopping here you must always be calculating how much you can actually weight and volume-wise back home. I've found myself numerous times with way too much, struggling to get it back home, which BTW includes carrying it up 4 flights of stairs! We ended up having a very lovely lunch/early dinner.
Yesterday, Saturday, we went to see an exhibit on Tiffany at the Musée du Luxembourg at the gardens with the same name. This is it's last weekend so we had to rush, and stay in the rain for about 20 minutes to get to tickets but it was well worth it. I was difficult to choose ones favorites among such exquisite pieces but you can see 2 of my favorites and read a review at http://www.artknowledgenews.com/2009-08-04-20-48-31-musee-du-luxembourg-opens-a-louis-comfort-tiffany-monographic-exhibition.html . It was really a feast for the eyes! Afterward we walked to a nearby cinema at the Metro Odeon where we saw the 3D version of Avatar. The house was packed and I thought we would be the oldest ones there until a group senior to us arrived looking for the very few remaining seats. I loved watching the technological wonder of 3D and of course enjoyed the age-old stories of the horrors of colonization, good conquering evil, love curing all, etc. However, I think my favorite parts were the creatures and scenery of Pandora, how magical! Nice to visit such a fantastic world for those few hours.
On the way home we stopped at a neighborhood Italian restaurant for a small bite to eat. This is a place very close by but into which we had never enter because it looked so sad. Recently, they fixed the place up nicely so we tried it but were under-whelmed by the food---way too much garlic! Gabriella is hard to please with Italian anyway but I even noticed the garlic excess. Anyway, we decided we would try them again some other for a pizza to see if those are good.

Saturday, January 16, 2010

Fellini exhibit

Yesterday after Gabriella was finished with her work we went to see an exhibit about Federico Fellini (just in time as it ends this Sunday) at Jeu de Paume at the Concorde. It's called Fellini, La Grande Parade.  There's a great review of it in English at http://www.ivyparisnews.com/2009/10/fellini-la-grande-parade-at-jeu-de-paume.html .  Afterwards, we walked to the nearby shop of Pierre Hermé on rue Bonaparte (www.pierreherme.com) to buy a few of their famous macarons.  These are nothing like the macaroons one finds in the States.  They are a type of meringue cookie with a filling and come in different colors/flavors. Paris is known for these but unless you get really good ones, they aren't worth eating. On the other hand, if you get good ones, and Hermé has the best, it's like eating nothing you have ever had before....they simply melt in your mouth while oozing indescribable flavors such as citron, pistache, caramel, and more...check out their website. However, they are pretty expensive, 1E25 a piece, so that keeps us from buying too many.  We bought four as a treat for after dinner. 
We moved from the heart of the 6th arrondissement back to our neighborhood where Gabriella had made reservations at a restaurant that had been recommended to her.  She wanted for this dinner to be the beginning of our weekend celebration of my birthday that falls on the coming Monday. She was told it was an Italian restaurant but neither of us could find anything on the menu that would warrant that designation.  We did however have excellent meals and they were able to accommodated me as a vegetarian.  The place has a set menu which is different everyday and consists of a 5 or 7 course meal.  We went for the 5 course one and we completely full by the end.  It started with a sort of soup, although there was very little broth, of fennel, celery, and red peppers, then there were 2 small dishes followed by the main course which for me was grilled sweet potato with some other veggies.  We ended with two desserts, a chocolate brownie something of another with little white somethings plus a bit of sherbet between a delicate cookie topped with a touch of some kind of meringue.  Needless to say, we didn't eat the macarons last night!

Friday, January 15, 2010

French class, Haiti

I just finished  lunch after having attended my 2-hour class this morning.  My teacher, Caroline, is quite a hoot.  She's middle-aged, like me : > ) but much younger.  She has a great head of very curly hair that's blonde with white roots, at times. Caroline is a very smart, dynamic teacher who speaks very rapidly, as do all the French, in my opinion.  But, she also has a wonderful sense of humor that helps us to stay tuned-in when there's little hope for complete understanding.  I'm in the level 3 class offered through the government of Paris.  The city offers French classes for immigrants at a much reduced price from the commercial establishments like L'Alliance Française.  This is my second semester there and I also think the system and teachers are much better than the other.  
As part of my own regime to learn the language, I listen to French talk-radio as often as I can.  Over the past 2 days, I've been listening to non-stop information about the disaster in Haiti.  How terrible to think of so many people trapped in that hopeless situation.  Paris is the center for Medicin Sans Frontière, Doctors Without Borders, and is one of the places people can donate to help get medicine and help to people there.  That website is http://www.msf.org/ in case anyone still hasn't donated or is not sure where to do that.  The French, of course, have a particular relationship and concern for the people there. Listening to news here in French, I can sense that acute concern.  

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Visiting the doctor

On the same topic of the doctor, I had to go in to my doctor yesterday to pick up a prescription for a medicine I take regularly.  She had told me to come in at 11AM so I arrived about 5 minutes early.  I entered the outer door and got to the next door at the end of the hallway where I had to push a button to be admitted.   After pushing it several times and waiting in between, I decided to call her to see what the problem was.  No answer so I left a message in French for her to call me back on my cell.  Instead of waiting in the dark hallway, I went to the adjacent cafe--there's always one of two--where I ordered a coffee, it's really an expresso, and a croissant.  I called her office a couple more times, to no avail, so I wrote a message on the backside of the bill explaining everything I had done to be there and to please call me to let me know when I could come again.  My intention was to drop it in her mailbox, which I had forgotten was behind the security door that I could not enter.  Anyway, after about 30 minutes sipping and munching, I went back into the building to try the buzzer one last time and low and behold, she buzzed me in.  So, I walked up the flight of stairs and entered her office.  It's a very stark and quiet entry with a door in front down the short hallway, the waiting room.  It only took a couple of minutes before Dr. Pradelle opened the door and asked me to come in.  She's very young, like she could be my daughter, and was wearing a pair of jeans with a sweater and boots.  I told her my saga, she speaks English so that makes it easy to tell such a long tale, and she said, "Oh I was down the hallway (meaning she was in the bathroom) and the battery on my phone is out."  Such is life in France--be on time, wait, have a coffee and croissant, and come back later...everything will be just fine!

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

Visiting the doctor

Today was supposed to be my first visit with a French dentist but the appointment got cancelled because he is sick...seems like the whole of Paris is sick, sauf moi! In my class today, the 3 others in my discussion group where all coughing and hacking. Then on the subway home everyone was blowing and sniffing, so I guess I shouldn't have been surprised that the doctor is also sick. I was actually looking forward to seeing the dentist, as it's been almost 3 years since I've been to one, plus I'm curious to see how the French dentists are compared to the medical doctors. Going to the doctor here is really strange. The first time I called the doctor a woman answered with "hello", well in French, of course. So, I asked, "Is this Dr. Pradell's office?", also in French. The woman said, "Yes, this is the doctor." Well, first of all, I was taken aback that the person didn't answer with "Good morning this is Dr. Pradell's office" and, secondly, that it was the doctor herself answering the phone! How many times does that happen in the States? Well my experience here is that most of them do answer their own phones because they don't have receptionists! When I went to her office she was the person who buzzed me into the building, as all buildings here have security codes for the entry doors. Then she came to the door and called me in when she was ready for me. Her office was actually in an apartment building, again many here are, on the second floor with NO elevator! So, what about the patients who are not able to climb stairs? The office itself was furnished with only her desk and a chair on the other side for the client. She did have a computer on her desk which is the first I had seen. (I have previously been to a couple of specialists, non of whom had computers.) When she examined me she had me to go into an adjacent room where there was an examination table but no over head lights or any type of extra equipment. But the end of the visit is the strangest of all because I paid her directly in cash, again, all the previous specialists were the same. I don't know why but there's something very odd feeling about paying the doctor directly, it just doesn't feel right to me. Oh, one last thing, she ordered a bunch of tests so I had to go to the different labs to have those done and each gave me the results directly. I ended up going back to my doctor so she could read the results but when I left I took all the X-rays, lab results, etc. with me and now I am responsible for keeping the originals of my own medical files! Guess I'm going to have to get a filing cabinet at some point.

Monday, January 11, 2010

Bookstore reading and dinner

Went to an afternoon conversation group for an hour and a half then met Gabriella at the Shakespeare & Co. bookstore to hear American poet Marilyn Hacker read from her works.  The place is right on the Seine near St. Michelle, the famous fountain and tourist site, and in a very very old building.  There were people standing outside trying to get in the door when I arrived.  Gabriella called my cell to say she was inside and upstairs so the woman taking care of the door led a bunch of us up the side stairs.  We all sat in a room full of old books and listened over a speaker system.  Afterwards, we had dinner in vegetarian restaurant nearby. Gabriella gave the same evaluation of the food that she had several years previously when we visited one of Paris' few other vegetarian establishments..."I'm never going back there!"  Of course, I told her she always orders the most common of dishes and doesn't like them.  Anyway, mine was fine, seitain with veggies and a salad.  We did share a desert that was dreadful, a chocolate crepe.  Now it's hard to get that one wrong but they served us old crepes that were more like rubber then food....so I have to partly agree with her.  We then walked past Notre Dame Cathedral on our way to the bus stop on the right bank.  The Xmas trees was still lit so it was quite beautiful, however, the Hotel de Ville was also still lit and that was an extraordinary site to behold.  That building is one of my favorites in the city and for the holidays they put blinking white lights across its rooftop.  The plaza below was ablaze with light covered trees and other light designs.  The cold was harsh but we both agreed that the walk well worth the effort and our bus arrived in just 4 minutes time.

1st day of blog

I received a blog today from Viola, an American friend who lives in Spain, and decided that this might be a good way for me to also keep a log of my life in Paris/France/Europe.  I tried when I first arrived to write descriptions of what life was like here for me but I didn't actually succeed in contributing much.  It is true that my life here is much much busier than I ever thought would be possible, so I don't have a lot of time to spend writing, but what I can do is try to keep a journal here for anyone who is interested in what I do.  I have a Facebook account but I don't really like that format since it doesn't allow me enough space to be long-winded, which I sometimes can be.  So, here it is 11 javier 2010 and I'm going to start this blog.  

It's very cloudy and cold in Paris today, although not cold enough to snow.  I've been to my morning 2-hour French class and am now ready to hit the books.  This is a very difficult language to learn and with my nearly 62-year old brain , I can't seem to keep the words, conjugations, grammar rules, etc. in my head.  In less than a month, I have a test to see if I pass to the next level, 4, so have a ton to cram in before that time.   It's hard to study when the charms of Paris are always calling from beyond my front door.  But I must begin.....