Sunday, August 28, 2011

One week flown by

Hello again! If any of you were disapointed by the lack of blogs this past week, allow me to explain: I am only going to update this blog once a week. This is to limit my extensive use of English, keep blogs interesting, and make the blog easier to maintain.


This week has been amazing. I'm rapidly getting to know the city around me in small doses and feeling like I can truly integrate myself into this culture. I live on the Île Saint-Louis, which is a small island in the Seine south of Île-de-la-cité, where Notre Dame is located. Paris is divided into 20 "arrondissements"or basically legal neighborhoods. But then there are smaller unofficial neighborhoods within that. Generally the nicer richer areas are in the center of the city, and you move your way out it becomes more immigrants, more students, etc.

Since we started at IFE this week, I've been spending time with a few other girls (and one boy) exploring the neighborhoods together. The metro is really the first thing to master. Not all the lines intersect, of course, so figuring out where to hop on and off has been interesting. It's not always convenient. It's for this reason that I walk 20 minutes to school every day. There is a metro stop really close to me, but it doesn't connect with the metro stop by IFE. I could walk to a further metro stop to go to IFE, but that would be a 10 minute walk, then a 5 minute metro ride to a stop that takes me 15 minutes to walk to, followed by a 5 minute walk that I would have had to do anyway. All in all I'm going to choose exercise over the metro fair.

Wine is ridiculously cheap here (the 2 Euro bottles are even good!) so we've been having a lot of picnics in parks and along the Seine. I'm not always going to have to cook my own meals, but the kitchen in my dorm is closed right now. We've also been going to cafes, buying fruit, making gourmet pasta (because when you're in the country of gourmets, the ingredients are not nearly as expensive). Most of our explorations, now that I think about it, have something to do with food or drink. I'm going to have to start walking more.

Classes are interesting, we're learning about contemporary French History (so the french revolution til now) and in the afternoons we have work on our speaking ability. My class has 3 oral presentations that we'll have to do, all having to do with modern french events. We also do the occasional visit to places in Paris. Last Thursday we went to the BNF- Bibliotèque National de la France (French national library). It it a very large building that has millions of books, and a very complicated system for retrieving them (all mechanical). I'm probably going to live there when it comes time to write my thesis paper on my internship.
This week we'll be going to the National assembly and the Shoah memorial.

See you next week!

Saturday, August 20, 2011

L'arc de triomphe... et moi?

WELCOME to blog number 4 on the Meg O'Halloran blog list. The others have included my environmental blog (which I hope to continue to add to), the Macalester EcoHouse blog (which contained all of my environmental blog's entries), and "Look what you're missing Simon!" a blog designed to make a certain Simon sorry that he'd ever abandoned his friends in Minnesota.

This blog is to narrate my time abroad in Paris, France (as opposed to the equally appealing Paris, Texas). The title of this blog "Parisienne ou vie quotidienne" is translated as "Parisian, or everyday life." The hope is that in my time here, this blog will not merely be about my life attempting to be Parisian, but about my transition into truly living here, and no longer visiting.

I'm here! I've been fed (thanks to the lovely boulangerie down the street), have successfully obtained wifi for my room, bought a cellphone, and taken a tour around my neighborhood. People are really nice, and they don't automatically assume I'm American! I think that's a good thing.

When I finally managed to figure out how I was going to get to Paris (silly me didn't read the nice instructions IFE gave us) I still didn't really believe I was in Paris. Sure, everything was in French, all the women looked like super models, and everyone wanted my Euros, but the country side didn't look that different. And everyone was driving on the RIGHT side of the road, not the left. Is that only in England? I'm on this big bus, totally at a loss to where I'm supposed to be getting off, only that when I do I HAVE to find a taxi. We stop once. Not my stop. The nice french man looked me in the eyes and said "Place d'étoile, le 15me arrondissement." (Place of the stars, fifteenth district). This was not that. The people got off. The taxis drove away. Was I even in the right city? The bus pulled away again. The architecture was shabby, old, cheap. The streets were dirty. Where was this Parisian Paradise I'd been promised?

And then we were driving around l'arc de triomphe. Suddenly it struck me, "Oh God I'm here!" And I finally felt excited to be embarking on this adventure.

I guess what they don't tell you in Study Abroad orientation is that you haven't really left until you're off the plane. Until then, you're still in the United States, or some sort of international buffer zone. But when I saw l'arc, I knew that I was here. The carved stone statues along the side towered over even the tall bus, gazing off at nothing, at everything. There were gates around, and a whirlwind of vehicles desperately trying to navigate around each other, in a traffic circle where lanes don't seem to exist.

The taxi was waiting for me right off the bus. It took me straight to my new home, a foyer in the 4th district, five minutes from Notre Dame. I became scared again, since the doors to the building where large and wooden, and the place didn't seem very inviting. But when I pressed the buzzer and opened the doors, I found a beautiful garden waiting for me.

I live on the 5th floor (they say it's the 4th, but they also say the 2nd floor is the 1st, so I know what they're up to). There's no elevator, so it's a great source of exercise (so I'm telling my aching thigh muscles and my puffing- out of breath lungs). The single is slightly smaller than my room in the EcoHouse. I have a sink in my room, a bookshelf, plenty of closet space, and a small window looking over a playground. They also don't tell you how adorable it is when little children are screaming in French.

After napping for 5 hours after I arrived yesterday, and sleeping for 13 hours last night, I hope that I'm sufficiently recovered from my travels and that jet lag will not plague me.

I've had plenty of adventures so far: Using the shower (the water would not get hot), finding a pharmacie where I could buy soap and shampoo, and finding a boulangerie where I could get some food. The big adventure was today, when I endeavored to buy myself a cellphone. This took me off the safe ile Saint-Louis and over into the 1st district. I found my first French Mall. It was huge... and pretty much the nice version of a target. And by nice, I mean NICE. Imagine if Nordstroms decided it needed a hardware store, kitchen department, electronics store, and toy store.


Tomorrow will involve me searching for more necessities, and hopefully braving the metro. More soon!
Pictures soon!