Everything is fine. Really. I promise.
Who doesn’t love Paris?
I find myself repeating the same words
time and time again. For 4 months now I have been repeating these words,
monotonously but with a gracious smile, as if someone were pulling a string
from my wooden puppet back.
We found a beautiful apartment in the
16th as well as a private nursery school in the neighborhood. The area is
lovely but a tad Upper-East-Side-Esque-meets-Stepford-wives. I suppose that,
technically, people are polite but their excusez-moi
is forced and rarely accompanied by a smile. Rather, they tend to say excusez-moi with pursed lips and an
accompanying poof-boof-oh-la-la sort of shrug and a toss of perfectly coiffed
hair that matches, of course, their purse and shoe ensemble that, of course,
matches their cashmere and fur lined sweater set. And it is perfectly
acceptable to bark orders to a stranger on the street. Next time someone barks
at me I think I will just stand and stare, perhaps even smile. A strange, evil
smile can be very intimidating, no?
The irony is that I do not look wildly
different from the other women on the street aside from the fact that I opt for red rather than pink lips. According to a French friend, I am too friendly and set myself up
for disappointment and attack. Like a vulture smells the vulnerability
associated with gangrene?
What a cynical way to live though.
Safe away in my enclave, our apartment
is all unpacked. I suppose that my compulsive-organizational-obsession-disorder
was revealed to all and I managed (with my mother’s help) to organize our
apartment. However, one problem remains: since the apartment is not modern, the
cupboards are long and deep so they are totally impractical unless you are 7
foot tall with 5 feet long arms. As a result, I have needed to be very crafty
and practical in organizing and so our linens are stored in the dining room
closet, and my shoes are stored in the office cupboards next to Cedric’s wooden
train set. As a side note, how did I accumulate so many pairs of shoes?
The mid-life
crisis-puff-daddy-comparable-to-a-red-Porsche barbque has been relegated to the
guest room until it can be sold. Note to guests: it is forbidden, even under
the influence of alcohol-love-or-hunger, to use this monstrous machine for the
preparation of meat-dessert or otherwise.
Organizing is one thing but maintenance
is another. I am trying to rummage a bit of help at home. I have decided that I
do not enjoy ironing, washing, loading and unloading, chopping, blending,
folding, cleaning and vacuuming. Who enjoys this really? The pain associated
with standing in front of the ironing board is diluted by Glenn Close in the
season finale but the cost of paying someone 10Euro an hour to iron is more
painful. Perhaps I can turn housework into a game and invest in a French maid
costume? Perhaps I will only wear spandex going forward since it is a material
that needs no ironing.
I have been feeling nostalgic for
fieldwork in Africa as of late. Did I think about ironing or did I think about
project deliverables? Did I worry compulsively about the dust mites under the
bed or did I worry about the impact of financial planning on our projects? I
feel a bit tired, as though I have lost my direction and think about the dreams and plans that used to inspire me. I never wanted to have a house with a white picket fence and I never wanted to have an office job.
I turn off the computer and wander into a coffee shop. I glimpse at myself in the mirror and I am sad to find that I look gaunt, tired, and overall gray. But I am welcomed with a bit of kindness- despite my outwardly aged appearance the barman smiles broadly and greets me with an emphatic "Bonjour Mademoiselle." A friend once told me that if I want to drown my sorrows then the bathtub should be filled with cognac and not to forget my snorkel.
I turn off the computer and wander into a coffee shop. I glimpse at myself in the mirror and I am sad to find that I look gaunt, tired, and overall gray. But I am welcomed with a bit of kindness- despite my outwardly aged appearance the barman smiles broadly and greets me with an emphatic "Bonjour Mademoiselle." A friend once told me that if I want to drown my sorrows then the bathtub should be filled with cognac and not to forget my snorkel.