Nutella crepe. Champagne and strawberries. Boom. |
So...Paris. Lovely, charming, magical, romantic, exciting, devastatingly beautiful, mysterious, sensational Paris. Putting this on my list was a major, major move, because I honestly can't believe I spent over 29 and a half years never having experienced it. It was amazing.
Rather than get into the day-by-day, I thought I'd just write a little bit about my overall experience. If I find myself particularly inspired (or bored) one day, I might write about some of the specific stuff we did. But when I described what I wanted our trip to Paris to be, I think the most common thing I said was: "I just want to be in Paris." Meaning, rather than hustle ourselves around with an itinerary, I wanted to have the tourist-y stuff we did sort of fit into the bigger picture of walking around, exploring, just existing in Paris. And I think we managed to accomplish that quite well.
Yo, that thing looks familiar. |
First off, I must give a special shout-out to my travel companion, Andrew. From introducing me to my first (but not last) Lauduree macaroon to simultaneously falling asleep on our Seine boat cruise to accidentally breaking a tacky plastic snow globe at a Champs Elysee gift shop, we laughed about everything. Our jet-lag induced napping habits may not have been in sync, but our level of desire for French carbohydrates sure was, and that's really all that mattered.
In thinking back to my impressions of Paris, I think of one word: beauty. Our apartment in the Marais, with its carved wooden ceilings and windowed doors with a view of the neighborhood below, was beautiful. The French men and women sitting outdoors at the cafe next door to our apartment were beautiful -- just looking at them made me feel tragically unfashionable and uncultured. The architecture was beautiful, and I'm not just talking about places like Sacre Coeur or the Eiffel Tower (which are, of course, beautiful). I'm talking about the normal apartment buildings all over the city, the bouquinistes lining the banks of the Seine, the narrow alleys in Ile St. Louis, the Metro station in Montmartre. The food was beautiful (and delicious -- more about that later). Hell, even the graffiti in Paris was beautiful.
Sacre Coeur. Way pretty. |
Great reason to make the climb up Notre Dame: this dude, up close and personal. |
Lauduree: I want to go (back) to there. |
The other thing I loved doing in Paris -- and something I must eternally thank Andrew for being so patient with me about -- was photographing stuff. And by stuff, I mean EVERYTHING. I think all told, I took about 680 pictures in a 4 day time span, about 70 of which I uploaded on my Flickr page. As the fashion industry has shown us, beautiful things photograph easily, and I found Paris to be no exception. I hear the "it's not the camera, it's the photographer" adage a lot, but in the case of photographing Paris I'd say, "it's not the photographer, it's the city". I wish I'd brought my tripod (nerd alert!) to have really captured the "lights" part of the City of Lights, but hey, a hankering for some night photography is as good a reason to go back as any, right?
Okay, I am beginning to realize I could probably write 15 more of these about my trip, but I'm going to stop myself for now. I'll conclude by saying this: to everyone who made suggestions, thank you so much. We took a lot of them. And to everyone who is as captivated by Paris as I now am, or who wants to be: I'm ready to go back.
(Also, one last shout out to our apartments' proprietor, Amandine, who not only helped us with this amazing apartment, but also had fresh croissants, pain au chocolat, baguettes and wine waiting for us after a loooong overnight flight. She's got a pretty cool business going in Paris, so if you have occasion to go, definitely check her website out.)
Your trip sounds perfect! So happy you got to cross that off the list!
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