Paris Semester Abroad

tammikuuta - toukokuuta 2024
Beanie’s little gander to Paris to see lots of things Lue lisää
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  • Päivä 50

    Toad’s tidbits debut!

    25. helmikuuta, Ranska ⋅ 🌧 8 °C

    Hello!
    While on the phone yesterday with mother, I came up with a grand idea. In one of my favorite French movies, the main character Amelie kidnaps her father‘s beloved garden gnome and makes it appear as though it is traveling around the world, sending him commemorative postcards at each destination. I don’t have have a garden gnome, but I do have a small stuffed toad (from the frog and toad series) that my mother knitted for me. I figured might place him in silly destinations around Paris, with a snarky caption, as a small creative project.

    While taking this first series of pictures at my favorite local grocery store, Auchan, I noticed something peculiar. I often struggle with social anxiety in public places, particularly in Paris where it’s crowded and I don’t speak the language very well. But the act of doing something small and ridiculous (and ultimately harmless) in a public place, accompanied by my pet toad, made me feel strangely relaxed and unbothered by the prospect of being judged. It was really cool. I think I will take him to more places soon.
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  • Päivä 51

    Hoppy birthday Sigrid!

    26. helmikuuta, Ranska ⋅ 🌬 6 °C

    Hi everyone! Nothing special on my end but certainly for my lovely mother, who is turning an undisclosed age today. How she has managed to keep it together for this long baffles me. Alas I do not have the funds to send her France‘s best wine, chocolate, macarons, and yarn, which is everything that this incredible woman deserves and more. My mother is the person who most encouraged me to come to Paris and to write a penguin post every week sharing my life. She’s the person I call when I’m sick, tired, lonely, and homesick. Her patience with my whining and petty problems is (almost) infinite. Without her it’s safe to say, I’d be very lost, and not the sort that google maps can help you with. So my trusty toad and I got together and decided to make her this little birthday card. We hope she likes it as much as we do. Happy birthday Sigrid! 🎉🎁🥂🐸Lue lisää

  • Päivä 64

    weekend in normandy with Madeleine

    10. maaliskuuta, Ranska ⋅ ☁️ 8 °C

    Hi everyone! after a horrendously stressful week of exams (4 to be exact,) with much crying and existential dread, it was time for a break. Luckily my lovely friend Madeleine invited me on a small weekend trip to her house in normandy, about a two hour drive from Paris. I took the metro to her house and we set off in the family car, accompanied by loud singing and many creative French road rage expressions.

    Madeleine's house is very similar to the one we have on LDI. It's small, charming, and well-decorated, with a different pattern of 70's wallpaper for each room. (Plaid for the kitchen, green for the living room, flowers for the bedrooms.) The house has only two floors and a basement, where the family stores drinks, garden tools, and walnuts. The house itself is filled with old wooden furniture, comfortable beds, and family memorabilia, with oil paintings of sailboats on the walls. When you enter it, it feels like a warm hug, like the house is saying "welcome weary traveller, I know you've come a long way. Life here is simpler than the one you left behind." It also has a wonderfully large collection of French Asterix and Obelix comics. (If you know, you know.) After a brief trip to McDonald's for sustenance, I passed out under a thick cotton comforter and had the best sleep of my life. No light pollution and noise makes for a deep, delicious rest.

    Madeleine's brother Gabriel and her grandmother Elisabeth woke up before us. Elisabeth speaks no English but she is such a warm, hospitable woman who clearly loves having guests. That morning, after a breakfast of jam, toast, and nesquick, we set off for the town of Bayeux to see their cathedral and a 1,000 year old artifact called the "tapisserie Bayeux". It's a spectacular hand-embroidered tapestry that measures a whopping 70 meters in length and depicts the Norman conquest of England in 1066. It served as a kind of medieval comic book, educating the largely illiterate peasant population about the important historical event. An accompanying museum gave details about the restoration and the many times it was almost lost in history. The cathedral and town offered us a cute little walk during which I learned more about swearing in French than history.

    After that we headed to a place called the point d'hoc, an important military outpost for the Germans during WWII. The barracks and bunkers are mostly intact (you can even enter them), and you can still see the places where the cannons and machine guns were mounted. The landscape is dotted with deep craters left by American bombs that are now overgrown with lush grass. These remnants of war offer a stark contrast to the beautiful expanse of blue ocean that greets you just over the edge of the cliff. There's a stone monument there commemorating the 77,000 Allied troops who lost their lives during D-Day and the resulting Battle of Normandy.

    It began to rain. We sprinted to the car and drove to our next stop, a home-depot adjacent store called "Jardiland", to buy supplies for the work we needed to at home. Once we got there, we helped Madeleine's dad and uncle remove the clusters of invasive mistletoe from the family's orchard of fruit trees, which include cherries, applies, pears, and quinces. Mucking around in the grass with buckets reminded me so much of home. Madeleine showed me their vast garden, the stream out back, and the house of a neighbor that they don't like.

    After a short break, grand-mère called us to dinner with a steaming plate of coquilles-san Jacques (Brittany scallops), white wine, and crusty bread. A lovely apple tart and lively conversation followed. After dinner, Madeleine and I headed upstairs to watch a movie called "fatal bazooka", a popular French comedy about a rapper who falls from grace. A cultural experience that saw us both fall asleep at the end. A lovely day and a restful sleep, there nothing that I love more.

    Sunday morning was, well, sunny. The perfect weather for our last planned activity, which was to visit the beach. Madeleine drove us through a cute French seaside town and showed me her great-grandmother's old house, only to find out that the town was hosting a marathon that blocked thru access to the beach. After finding a hole in the runners, we crossed and walked down the beach boardwalk to the shore, lined by a stately hotel and bistro. We sat down on a large beach towel in the sand and picked up shells while staring out at the misty blue sea. Watching the waves unfurl on the shore and chatting with Madeline was so peaceful and serene that the hours ran away from us. After awhile we packed up our things and took a meandering walk back to the car, which we drove to the carwash (a cultural experience in itself that I won't get into). We were called home for lunch soon after.

    Lunch was grand-mère's final piece de resistance before our departure in the afternoon. First, she served us a slightly pungent paté that looked like head cheese, and smoked brittany sausage, with more baguette. But the real star of the show was a dish called boudin, which is basically congealed pig's blood encased in its own intestine. We have something similar in Germany so I wasn't too alarmed, but it would have been enough to make any vegan shake in their boots. I had less of a problem with the flavor and more with the texture, which is like blood jello. When eaten with strong horseradish mustard, however, it's actually quite pleasant. We cracked walnuts from the basement stores and drank Coca Cola until grand-mère emerged from the kitchen with more apple tarts. Nap-time followed. Before I knew it, it was already time to head home.

    The ride home was largely quiet. Grand-mère pointed out the stables where the famous racehorses are bred (apparently the prince of Monaco bought one) and pastures with grazing sheep and cows. I learned that the word for water tower is "chateau d'eau", which literally means water castle. Madeleine and I both took a nap, and when I woke up we were already almost in Paris. Of course, it was grey and traffic-filled, like it always is. I wished in the back of my mind that we could have stayed longer, but it was enough to have been once. When we said goodbye, Grand-mère gave me a kiss on both cheeks and wished me well. Madeleine brought me to the metro station and hugged me. I got on the train and I was staring out the window something strange happened. We crossed the Seine, directly by the station next to the Eiffel Tower. The clouds broke and a ray of sunlight shone through, illuminating the tower and a river filled with boats and people in a beautifully picturesque scene. There was an audible murmur, and a child shouted out "look outside!".

    Paris is a city designed to be marveled at. It is beautiful thanks to the careful design of architects and tasteful people. But it is still capable of moments of spontaneous beauty that are not preconceived, like when it greets its residents with a moment of rare sunshine. Or perhaps it knew I was returning, and wanted to say "I may have more rats and snobbish people than Normandy, but I am still your home."

    a bientôt everyone. See you next post :)
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  • Päivä 70

    Saturday stroll in le neighborhood

    16. maaliskuuta, Ranska ⋅ ☁️ 15 °C

    I woke up this morning in a horrible state of anxiety. The kind where your lizard brain thinks your house is on fire and you need to flee immediately. Sometimes this happens to me during high-stress periods (applying to internships, planning travel, meeting school deadlines etc. etc), but I’ve recently been trying to put more of an effort into healthy coping. So instead of pulling the covers over my head and drawing my curtains to block any ray of sunshine from entering the room, I pulled myself together, got dressed, and took a walk outside.

    These are some of the pictures that resulted. Saturdays are a lively time in France where parents, kids, old couples, and randos who haven’t done their grocery shopping for the week emerge from their apartments and fill the streets with bustling activity. I love the 13th because of the endless number local businesses that line the narrow streets, affording it a delightfully crowded and communitarian vibe. The corner only a step away from my apartment represents a microcosm of the middle class arrondissement in Paris. We may all come from different walks of life, but we all need to grocery shop.

    France fact #1: France is the epitome of the phrase «parts sold separately ». French people are notoriously suspicious of big business, « la grande distribution », and supermarkets have only recently come into fashion because of their convenience. However, even convenience has its drawbacks. Who wants to buy imported pomegranates from India and ham packaged in plastic when you could get a juicy slab of « jambon de Paris » from your local butcher and cheap, delicious apples grown in the south of France at a market. In the second photo you can even see the business had won a gold medal for their sauerkraut in 2012, giving their products extra credibility.

    So instead, we have a poissonneries (seafood store), boucheries (butchers), fromageries (cheese shops), épiceries (local grocers), and traiteurs (vendors of cooked food). The traiteurs in the 13th are particularly diverse, encompassing Lebanese, Chinese, Vietnamese, Greek, and Italian cuisine, to name a few. All of these stores are a bit more expensive than standard grocery prices but always come with the benefit of better quality and support for local businesses. I don’t shop there often, but when I do it’s worth it.

    Enjoy these pictures of my lovely neighborhood everyone. I hope you feel as charmed as I do, especially by the last photo of the lady in the blue coat with her husband. I tried extra hard not to violate their data privacy.

    A bientôt :)

    - Leah
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  • Päivä 74

    A moment of spring

    20. maaliskuuta, Ranska ⋅ ☁️ 20 °C

    Im pretty exhausted today. Class from 10-5 and the last one is three hour ordeal on European economic integration that seems to drain every last drop of concentration that I have.

    I always come home and open my window to let in the clean air. Clear away the things strewn around the apartment from when I rushed out the door this morning. Outside, evening is just beginning to set in. But today I heard something. The strains of someone practicing the saxophone in the distance. I paused to pick out the notes of of the theme: F C Bb Ab F. The voices on the street and chirping intermingled with the melody, as the floral perfume of my neighbor’s budding garden floated inside. And for a small moment I forgot about my worldly troubles. It’s spring in Paris and life is starting to return outside. I am surrounded by a world that I can’t always see, by people whose names I don’t know, but today their presence could be heard.

    A ten second video doesn’t capture the essence quite well enough, and neither do my descriptions. But if you turn the volume up all the way, perhaps you’ll be able to make out the saxophone and hear the sound of the 13th coming to life.
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  • Päivä 135

    Florence

    20. toukokuuta, Italia ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Hey y’all!

    So as most of you know Paris has come to an end and I am now experiencing the unfamiliar terrain of travelling around Europe by myself. I’ve already visited family in Germany and spent a few days in Valencia with my dad. Florence is my first travelling stop where I am well and truly alone, without a family member close by to bail me out.

    I have liked it so far! The night before last I met three Americans in my hostel room, and we proceeded to go out to a bar together and pay too much money to listen to 2010’s bangers in a sticky, crowded room. We spent all of the next day together and went an artisan market, a Leonardo da Vinci museum, a lookout point, and an Irish pub, amongst other destinations. I was shocked at how easy they were to travel with and we got on very well as a group. As for today, they’ve all departed so it’s up to me to find something to do. I went to the archeological museum and saw some beautiful Etruscan vases, Greek bronzes, and (surprisingly) a robust collection of ancient Egyptian artifacts. Who knows what else I’ll do today, but enjoy the photos!
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  • Päivä 136

    Last day in italia!

    21. toukokuuta, Italia ⋅ 🌙 17 °C

    Hello hello!

    Today was my last day in Italy and I think I spent it well, if I do say so myself. However, the day got off to a rocky start, I endeavored to chase away my morning nausea with breakfast, so I bought a shiny, brioche-esque roll at a nearby bakery. After biting into it I was unpleasantly surprised to taste a dense, sweet raisin bread with ROSEMARY in it. Not helpful as far as nausea is concerned.

    After I recovered I decided it was time to head to the indoor market. Like most markets it was a bustling Mecca of sensory overload but honestly, it fell a bit short in comparison to Valencia. The fish looked slightly anemic but the meat selection appeared quite tasty. I was so distracted by the hubbub of sights and smells that I very nearly forgot to run to the uffizi gallery for my reservation slot.

    The Uffizi was without a doubt the single best thing I did in Florence. I spent a total of three hours in there looking at hellenistic marble statues and breathtaking oil paintings. The statues were remarkably anatomically correct for a time when “humors” were considered the central tenet of medical science. You can get lost wandering the galleries, which are helpfully organized by theme. Michelangelo’s drawings, Caravaggio’s Medusa, Botticelli’s primavera, a charcoal drawing of the lamentation of Christ, and a statue of Venus were among the best things I saw. These all made up for the stench of tourists that lingered in the large halls’ unconditioned air.

    To close out my last day I took myself to a trattoria. Alone. *gasp* Id never done it before but I think it’s a good rite of passage for adults. I twirled my carbonara around my fork, let the waiter pick my wine for me, and tried not to eavesdrop on the conversation of the American family next to me. I felt like they were judging me for eating alone, but they very kindly protected my bag when I left the restaurant without it and had to come running back. Afterwards I enjoyed a small gelato by the bridge and watched the sunset. The utter freedom of being an adult is beautiful, lonely, and complicated. But it’s all a little sweeter when you have some gelato along with it :)

    (I made some friends last night too!)
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  • Päivä 140

    A viennese vacation

    25. toukokuuta, Itävalta ⋅ ☁️ 21 °C

    As the title already implies I’ve reached the last leg of my independent odyssey, Vienna! It’s a bit like the Paris of the German speaking world. The city appears well-off and is dotted with lavish, baroque buildings complete with statues and gold trim. It’s charming at first but becomes taxing after a few days. The inhabitants speak a somewhat barbaric version of German but this too can be charming, in the right setting.

    The photos above will show you the places I’ve been to, including a butterfly greenhouse, the Palmenhaus, the Staatstheater, the Narrenberg medical museum, Beethovens apartment, the Belvedere collection, the naschmarkt, the hundertwasserhaus, and the Schönbrunn castle. These are lovely locations but I was, however, less enchanted by the 10 euro price tag that accompanied a singular small coffee and slice of cake. Not to mention the hostel with medical grade disposable bedsheets and bed frames that squeal if you dare to move to move as an inch in your sleep.

    Arguably the best thing I’ve done thus far is go to the Wiener Konzerthaus, where I snagged a student ticket to the Quator Mosaïque for only twelve euros. Haydn and Boccherini for the first half, Schubert in c major quintet for the second. At my third row seat, I made a discovery that would make the evening all the more worthwhile. An elderly woman dressed in a stylish burgundy outfit with nicely coiffed grey hair. What began as a pleasant conversation between seat neighbors morphed into a night-long friendship with a woman whom I quickly learned was eighty-two and had walked forty minutes on foot from her apartment to hear her favorite piece, the Schubert.

    To say that this woman was enchanting is an understatement. Through our conversation I began to learn bits and pieces about her. She was married to a Barvarian. Her apartment is on the very top floor and when it hails, her window shutters turn brown. She doesn’t like the tram because it’s too crowded. She likes the English better than the Americans, but they are a bit too pompous. After each concert, she walks the same route home to her apartment and enjoys a cigarette and a glass of wine before going to bed, as these are the simple pleasures in life. During the third movement, she remembers a line from the Strauss opera Ariandne auf Naxus that proclaims “music is a holy art.”

    At the end of the performance we exchanged opinions, both agreeing that the first cello player had somewhat overpowered the rest of the group. “I shall accompany you,” she announced as we waited for her things at the coat check, “so we can chat a bit more.” The employee brought her a man’s hat and a simple trench coat. As he handed them over she lightly touched his arm. “It was so beautiful. You had to have seen it!” Once outside, as I struggled to explain to her that Maine was the easternmost state in the US, she suddenly switched to perfect English. With grammatical precision and excellent pronunciation she informed me that English literature was one of the things keeping her brain alive. I unsuccessfully tried to mask my surprise as we continued towards the tram station, when the tram suddenly appeared. It was time to part ways She gave me a brief kiss on both cheeks and waved goodbye, before disappearing into the night. It all happened so quickly that I didn’t catch her name. But she doesn’t need one. She’s extraordinary even without one.
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