Paris: hits and misses, and a miss to miss
This blog is no longer the preserve of a Parisian, so perhaps it is too early to be too dogmatic about what to look back on with a smile and what to be glad to see the back of.
But here goes anyway:
What I'll miss:
* The sheer man-made beauty of both banks of the Seine
* The Métro. Parisians complain, of course, but it almost always worked for me
* Eurostar within easy reach
* Being able to get Indian food delivered to the door (even the Parisian version is better than nothing)
* Rebecca. Who is Rebecca Schofield? Bill Taylor asked the question when I used Rebecca's computer to make an e-mail response to his photo website.
She is, or was, my assistant. As an Englishwoman living in Paris (with a rural bolt hole), and as wife, mother, go-getter and unrivalled collector of friends, she knows just about everything about living in France
* And Rebecca will miss being reminded of Robin, the young work experience visitor who wrote in his subsequent school project of her dynamism and her ability to keep her desk tidy "amidst general disorder". He also lopped 15 years off our ages
* That view. I tried my best to give the impression of being blasé, but you cannot keep a straight face for long while feigning indifference to a panorama that begins with the Louvre, takes in the Tuileries with the Musée d'Orsay, twin spires of Ste Clotilde and the Assemblée Nationale as backdrop before arriving at the Eiffel Tower via Invalides and the Champs Elysées. Breathtaking
* Keeping relatively fit by fast-walking circuits of the Tuileries
* Parisian jazz
* Lifts to Parisian badminton clubs from Ming Lam, my friend from the Auberge des Gourmets Chinese restaurant.
* Being able to walk to functions at the Elysée, Quai d'Orsay or British Embassy. In fact, being able to walk to most places in the city centre
* Easy access to live English football whether or not you secretly have one of those Sky cards at home
And what I won't:
* The price of everything from mushroom omelette and chips to an unremarkable baguette in the 1st arrondissement
* The army of beggars. Paris seems to have more than most cities and a large proportion seems genuine, distinguishing them from the shift working professionals I have seen in action from Lyons to London. If the current wave of protests in support of France's SDFs - sans domicile fixe - inspires effective, humane action, it has my blessing
* Having to count a few extra seconds as drivers whizz by after pedestrian crossing lights turn green, and even then venturing out warily
* The feeling at the height of summer that there is no escape from the clammy heat
* Clanking old lifts that spot heavy bags a kilometre off and render themselves en panne
* And yes, there has to be more. But for once, I have run out of negative thoughts.....for now.
Labels: Assemblée Nationale, beggars, drivers, Eiffel Tower, Elysée, Eurostar, heat, Indian food, Invalides, Louvre, Métro, Musée d'Orsay, Paris, Rebecca Schofield, SDF, Seine, Ste Clotilde, Tuileries






