Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Paris!

This post may be overwhelmingly long, but I really need to express and share the gratitude and love I have for Paris. I had the time of my LIFE in Paris and I have to partially thank Briana B. back in Boston for introducing me to some of her friends here. It is true that Parisians are snobby, but once you are friends with the right people you'll think otherwise, get into the best clubs, be introduced to the best restaurants, and have a total different experience than what a tourist would have. I got the experience that an ordinary Parisian would have and I am entirely grateful.

Living on one of the richest streets in Paris set my eyes on the true Parisian life.  I walked everywhere to take in the scenery, only talking the metro if I was in a rush or if a lazy friend accompanied me. Some walks went up to an hour one-way. I enjoyed venturing off to museums by myself: Louvre (Mona Lisa, Venus, Hammurabi Code), Musée du Vin (favorite), Orsay, Musée du Luxembourg, Orangerie (Monet), Rodin (The Thinker statue), Pompidou. Attending Mass at Notre Dame and seeing relics from Jesus' time was a lifetime experience. The Arc de Triompe, Pantheon, Hotel des Invalides (Napoleon's tomb) and a few historic churches were beautiful. Helping out at soup kitchens and doing midnight runs to feed the poor opened my eyes that poverty exists even in the richest cities. As expensive as Disneyland Paris and Moulin Rouge were, THEY WERE AMAZING. Experiencing the environment at Paris Fashion Week was a dream. Visiting and buying from the first Chanel to have ever existed was unreal.

During each trip I take, no matter where I go in the world, I make a list prior to leaving for the country of the must-sees and must-dos when I get there. Now since I knew I would be living in Europe for a long period of time, I wrote down an extremely extensive list for places I knew I would visit. As soon as I land, I obtain a map for each city I'm in so I can mark it up and plan where I'm going to go first, what days, right up until the very last day of my stay in that place.. You could imagine how much fun I had living in Europe. Pre-planning always reaps benefits.

Arc de Triomphe


Notre Dame 




 Musée du Louvre 
The most famous and largest museum in the world





 Mona Lisa 
The most famous painting in the world


Venus

Hammurabi Code


  
Monet's "Rouen Cathedral"


Disneyland Paris
Halloween















Moulin Rouge




Chanel  
The first Chanel ever



Tiffany

Champs Elysees 
Louis Vuitton

 
Paris Fashion Week 


Gelato anywhere! I've now tasted Amorino in Rome, Paris, and NYC! *cheeses*


Black Paris Fashion Week
Musée du Vin





 Musée d'Orsay




Starry Night in the Rhone

Bedroom in Arles

Monet


Dope, classic fashion exhibition

Musée Rodin



 
Musée du Luxembourg

 


Musée de l'Orangerie
Monet

Pantheon
Foucault Pendulum




Sainte-Chapelle



Hotel des Invalides




Pompidou


Chapel of our lady of the miraculous medal 
Louise de Marillac

St. Vincent de Paul Chapel
St. Vincent de Paul

Fun fact: St. Vincent de Paul Chapel is located next door to the St. John's University campus in Paris. It is the place we had Mass at every Sunday. Louis de Marillac's chapel is only a block and a left turn away. St. Vincent de Paul and Louis de Marillac's beliefs are the grounds St. John's University was founded on. 

Palais Maillot, Titty Twister, Duplex, Matignon and a few other clubs/lounges made my nightlife experience richer, especially when they played Niggas in Paris!

Palais Maillot 










Duplex






Matignon





The Latin Quarter and Trocadero had great restaurants. It took me forever to find a convenient restaurant for me and all of my friends in The Latin Quarter. I had my first view of the Eiffel from Trocadero, actually. I had Japanese food at Le Shangai and Chinese food at Chez Chang and Eurasie, but crème brûlee, escargot (snails), entrectôte, macaroons, cheeses, chocolate, crepes solidified my Paris experience.
 
Bistro Parisien
 French fries 

Le Danton 
Located in The Latin Quarter
Steak, Tartar



Brasserie Esmeralda  
Crepe
 
Le Malakoff  
 Located in Trocadero, wonderful view of the Eiffel Tower from this restaurant
Entrecôte, Crème brûlee


Zero Zero Sevres
Escargot


 I did it! And I'm never doing it AGAIN.

More...


One thing I do remember, you can hardly get ANYTHING on a Sunday. You'll be lucky to find stores open. It's the little things that make you appreciate New York City and the city life more and more.

I also regularly ate chocolat and macaroons from the famous Maison du Chocolat. I tried all different types of cheeses (Swiss, Brie, Camembert, Bleu Cheese) like everyday for lunch or dinner as a traditional addition. I enjoyed a banana and nutella crepe from Montparnasse, literally only 4 or 5 blocks from my residence. I also think I had a ham and cheese crepe right after Mass at Notre Dame lol (fancy). I enjoyed escargot on my 2nd to last day in Paris (I believe); I really tried hard to hold back form it, but it was a must-eat in Paris. I drank Ricard, a drink you should drink before eating so you could be hungry (how it was explained to me -- I'm sure I sound stupid lol). Because I was so homesick for Jamaican food, I searched for Jamaican restaurants in the Paris area (just like I did in Rome) and found one called Cool and Calm about two different train rides away from where I lived. My friends and I (me, once) had to go there three times for us to figure out that it was closed down permanently. We were so upset and felt so stupid lol! I couldn't believe Paris didn't have a Jamaican restaurant when they have way more Africans than Rome! Nothing could compare to Jamrock in Rome though. And of course,  I occasionally ate at KFC and Mcdonalds (Europeans hate this entirely, you learn not to blame them). For the most apart, I did a lot of food shopping at the country's most popular supermarket chain store, Carrefour. So I cooked a lot and ate a lot of homeymeals.

Versailles was absolutely GORGEOUS. Marie Antoinette, learning about her through History class, has always been a favorite historical figure of mine. That place is simply, magical. I plan to go back there at least one more time in my life.











And of course, the insatiable, the Eiffel Tower! The jogs around it, the picnics, the train rides to and walks there. Dining where there was randomly perfect view of it (Trocadero, and omgosh, if you strike luck and eat there at night..the Eiffel sparkling? No words), going to the top to overlook Paris, the nights where we just sat on the grass, drunk wine, and watched it sparkle in the night were ALL magical. They were all forever-type-of-memories. I'll never forget.





 

 









A friend that befriended me through a friend invited me to Lyon.  I think if I had spent more time in France, I would've visited Lyon more often and loved it more than Paris. Everyone I've met who has lived in Lyon likes it better, and I completely see why. It's less snobbish and way more lax.

I ventured off everywhere in Paris, sometimes with others, most times by myself (especially because my friends and I never had the same time off from class). While living in Paris, I coordinated midnight runs and soup kitchen visits for the students I studied with. I walked and sometimes stopped at the post office while on a job to drop off postcards to my family and friends in the states and Jamaica. I also jogged throughout the Luxembourg Gardens several times. Because my school is a Catholic school, I went to mass at our campus in Paris where St. Vincent, one of the most famous Saints, is tombed. You can see his body. This was the case for so many places I visited: catacombs and the Vatican in Rome, several churches throughout Paris.

What WAS regularly scheduled for me and my girls in Paris, was a bottle of champagne/wine per night PER PERSON. My whole Europe trip was almost hard-liquor free with the abundance and cheapness of wine and champagne throughout the region. It was magical. Sometimes I even drunk two bottles a day because my body was so immune to them. I easily became a wineaholic. I voted as an absentee for Obama since I was abroad, which I considered a unique experience.


Now sadly, though I visited most places the average tourist doesn't get to do in a trip, I did not get to visit several places (that all came up when I first went there, however). I learned very fast how popping Paris' nightlife was, and after making a few loyal friends, I got in-the-know for where to. I definitely planned to hit up VIP Room, Sens, and L'ARC, but I never got a chance to hit those nightclubs. It is very hard to get into these prestige clubs as an American, unless your famous or know someone. I got to attend Palais Maillot and a few other prestigious clubs only through friends I made. I also got wind of the beauty of the Catacombs, nails from the Crucifixion of Jesus Christ at Notre Dame and Père Lachaise Cemetery, the burial ground of Oscar Wilde and many other famous people (one of my favorite authors). I also didn't get to try Kir, but after tasting Ricard, I don't think I want to.


I saw one of the famous rallies Parisisans are known to have. This one was one for freedom, naked freedom lol. Some were in bras and panties and some were even naked.

I even finished the Fifty Shades trilogy lol. Me and my roomie.




Though I did and saw all of these fantastic things, I still have unfinished business in Paris. There's still a few sites to see, clubs to go to, and more fun to be had with the friends I made and the ones I will bring back with me. Paris is a wonderful place when you embrace the culture. It is by far an addicting city despite the amount of euros I spent. I will be back sooner than you think. Thank you to all of the friends I made via other friends and on my own. As a very ambitious, independent, determined woman, I took complete advantage of almost everything in Paris without counting on a soul (and left a few things out on purpose so I have an excuse to come back), not to mention I got all As in my classes again. That's how you have to live life, have balance everywhere.  If you haven't been to Paris, I hope you have it on your to-do list before you die. I love you, Paris. There's a special place in my heart for you now.  Merci et au revoir, for now.

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