Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Paris: Part 1



“blow a kiss, fire a gun”

I learned in both my AP Psychology class in high school and my college General Psychology class that smell is an important part of memories. I remember a few different smells. The smell of Chloe, the perfume my aunt had on when she came to retrieve us from the airport, in her leather jacket with all her beautiful long hair up with chopsticks. She’s one of the most beautiful people, along with my mother and their other sister who is as funny and cool as she is beautiful. Then there’s my cousin with her love of Michael Jackson. Playful. Mischievous. Curious. Adorable. The smell of what I believe is the flowers in the trees around the city, but I’ve never been able to pinpoint where it comes from. Sometimes the smell will just hit you and take your attention away completely. The mechanical grimy wet smell of the metro eventually disappears after a view rides. The smell of the delicious food my grandmother would cook for us. I have so much to thank my family for, especially my mother.

My month long trip to Paris was unreal, beautiful, and comfortable. When I say comfortable, that translates to something unavoidable for me; I felt as if I belonged there. I belong there with the brick roads and the yellow streetlights and the cafes covered by ruby red awnings with the cafĂ© name in beautiful cursive. The little cars and the sound and the breeze of the metro and the eternal roar of the cars in the street. The leaves lying on the sidewalk, women in beautiful dresses and heels doing their errands or laughing and having a cigarette with an equally as beautiful comrade. Everything about this city made me want to abandon my home in America, abandon all the material things I left behind, and melt into this city. Become a permanent part of France that is as unmovable as the Eiffel Tower itself.  

I hardly felt homesick. I felt the opposite of homesick, I wanted to stay. This is where I have family. This is where the love of my life got to come with me and explore and eat immaculate food and drink wine in gardens overflowing with flowers and pigeons and lime green chairs. We’d laugh, and I’d say so often “We’re in Paris right now…” because it wasn’t real to me. The sunshine on your face feels different. I think this is the feeling of loving a place more than you love yourself. Maybe my euphoria seems weird to someone else who vacationed in Paris for 6 days with a strict itinerary, to see all that they could in the time allotted. I am the luckiest lady in the world. I got to stay for a month. I got to experience this place id experienced twice before, but very differently. I think a fear of mine is going back and not getting on the plane when it comes time to come home. An even bigger fear is what if I never go back?

I came home and Florida became mundane. Predictable. I go to French cafes to eat a fresh sandwich on a baguette and drink Orangina. I go to places with long streets and parks with little shops to try and find the closest thing I can. I get bored easily of places I’ve been too many times. Paris and my family left a void I keep trying to fill. If travel was cheaper id be leaving all the time. Id actually be missed because Id never be “home”. “Home” would cease to be a home for me, it would just be a place to keep my thinks and visit the people I love who never leave Orlando. I don’t want to be stuck here. I feel very much stuck here. I’d love to move somewhere else, even if it was just another place in Florida. Moving to Paris will just have to wait.


-B