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Tuesday, 15 July 2008
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An American Intern in Paris
BEFORE I BEGIN: I would like to give a quick shout-out to those of you who emailed me in response to my last blog post. IT MADE ME REALLY HAPPY! I love you...both. Yes, there were only TWO PEOPLE WHO RESPONDED DIRECTLY TO THE POST. I am beginning to feel distinctly unloved and underappreciated. No, seriously though, if nobody is going to read this then there’s really not much point in me keeping it up; I might as well just email those two people directly. So, if you’re reading this, and you have something to say about it or really anything to say to me at all, PLEASE EMAIL ME!!! CileeRox12@aol.com. Do it do it do it do it now!! Or maybe just after you read this blog post. Which, again, is really long. Sorry about that. So, now…LET’S BEGIN!!!!
Friends, Romans, countrymen! Lend me your ears!
This last week (or two) since I last wrote has been ridiculous. A veritable epic Odyssey of Parisian ridiculousness and getting lost.
Sing, O Muse, of the cobblestoned streets of Paris!
Sing of the myriad clothing stores, the historic bridges
Along its tree-lined boulevards, designed by Haussmann during the Second Empire!
Sing of its snooty hostesses in the office buildings,
Its modern architecture, its infestation of pigeons!
Through me, O Muse, tell the story of one girl’s attempts,
Her successes, her myriad failures,
To navigate its mazelike streets.
See? I told you it was an Odyssey!
But I have had enough of epic poetry.
A few more observations, then, since I tend to do better with lists than with dactylic hexameter. (HA! Ms. Gordon’s AP English Lit review sessions were not wasted on me!)
1. There is nobody in Paris who is my age. I have literally met not ONE SINGLE eighteen-year-old. It is actually really depressing, because I’ll start talking to somebody and suddenly I’ll find out that he is twenty-five years old, and there goes the conversation. This is a typical encounter…
Random guy: “So, where are you from?”
Me: “Guess.”
Random guy: “England?”
Me: “Nope.”
Random guy (hereafter referred to as RG) “America?”
Me: “Got it.”
RG: “So, are you here on vacation?”
Me: “Nope. I’m working here as an intern.”
RG: “Doing what?”
Me: “Teaching English, actually.”
RG: “Whoa, nice! (now he switches to English) My Eenglisch…erm…not good…I not study Eenglisch after school and when I am een school I not listen my teescher very good…”
Me: “That’s okay. I speak French.” (I mean, it’s not like I’ve already been talking to you for the past five minutes in French or anything…)
RG: “Right. What’s your name?”
Me: “Okay, it’s a really weird name, even in English, and nobody is ever able to pronounce it, so don’t feel bad when you fail at it…”
RG: “Okay.”
Me: “Ailea.”
RG: “Ayy-liah.”
Me: “No. Ailea.”
RG: “Aiy-layah”
Me: “Ai…le…a…”
RG: “Haie…lay…aahhh…”
Me: “You know what? You can just call me Lili.”
RG: “Haha, okay, good.”
RG: “So, what’s your origin?”
Me: “I just told you…American.”
RG: “No, I mean, like, your…” *motions around face and hair* “your actual origins.”
Me: “American.”
RG: “No, you don’t look American.”
Me: “Well, I’m biracial. My mom is African-American and my dad is white.”
RG: “Oh, so what’s your mom’s origin?”
Me: “AMERICAN.”
RG: “No, I mean originally.”
Me: “Well, maybe hundreds and hundreds of years ago her family came over from West Africa or something, but they’ve been in America for hundreds of years and nobody really knows which country in Africa they’re from…”
(Now, depending on their historical knowledge, I might have to explain to them the whole slavery/Civil War thing. Usually, though, they understand after the third time I explain it to them…)
RG: “So, how old are you?”
Me: “Guess.”
RG: “Uhh, twenty or twenty-one?”
Me: “Nope. Younger.”
RG: “Nineteen?”
Me: “Nope.”
RG: “EIGHTEEN???”
Me: “Yeah.” (This is where the conversation begins to go WAY downhill, as if it hasn’t already.)
RG: “You’re only eighteen? Oh my God, you’re just a baby!”
Me: (thinking to myself: you’re the one trying to pick up an eighteen year old, you dirty old man!) “How old are you? No, wait, let me guess. Twenty-four.”
RG: “That’s right! How’d you do that?”
Me: “Everybody that I meet here is twenty-four.” (And it’s TRUE. Freakishly so. And if they aren’t twenty four, they are no older than twenty-seven and no younger than twenty-two. That is a steadfast rule.)
RG: “So, can I have your number?” (Once again proving that he is a dirty old man trying to pick up an eighteen year old…)
Me: “I don’t have a cell phone here in Paris.” (That’s a lie. I do. But I don’t know the number by heart, so really, it’s not a complete lie.)
RG: “Well, do you want to take down my number?”
Me: “No thanks. See ya! Have a nice evening!” (And I make my escape.)
And that’s the end of the conversation. Seriously, though Parisian guys have NO IMAGINATION. That’s pretty much word-perfect, right there. However, I’d like to call your attention to a few things:
1. Parisian guys cannot pronounce my name, no matter how hard they try.
2. It is hard for them to believe that there are nonwhite people in America who consider themselves American, and not Senegalese-American or Algerian-American or whatever. It takes a lot of explaining and historical reference to make them understand.
3. THERE ARE NO GUYS MY AGE IN PARIS AND THE ONES THAT I TALK TO ARE, FOR THE MOST PART, REALLY CREEPY.
4. Okay, they’re not ALL creepy. I have made some actual FRIENDS here, which I didn’t really think would happen.
5. Notice during all of the above commentary, I have been talking about Parisian guys. This was deliberate. Because I have met NO PARISIAN GIRLS except for the ones at the office. Why, you ask? Well, I guess they’re just not interested in making friends. In any case, it’s only the guys who will actually have any kind of real conversation with me. (Also, you have to remember where I live: a neighborhood filled with young gay men. MEN. Not women. I guess the lesbian quarter is elsewhere. Honestly, I have no urge whatsoever to go find it.)
6. …that’s pretty much it. There is no #6.
As for my job, well, it pretty much rocks. Plus, now I have something to put on my resumé under work experience! It shall be thus:
Place of Work: Paris, France
Company: ICB Europe
Duration: June 22-July 31, 2008
Job Title: Lowly Peon Substitute English Teacher, General Office Drone
Main Responsibilities: I do the work that nobody else wants to do or cannot do because they are on vacation.
No, seriously though, even at the bottom of the totem pole, my job rocks. There are fun people in the office to work with, my days are filled with taking the metro to random businesses in Paris to talk in my native language for an hour, making phone calls to grumpy businessmen and women (which is sometimes hilarious, let me tell you!) and generally joking and messing around with my co-workers. I rarely see any of the other teachers, because when they are not teaching they are normally at home doing whatever it is they want to do; they don’t spend much time in the office unless they are turning in papers or making copies or something, so I hang out with the office staff during lunch and breaks and stuff. (WHOA that was a super long sentence!)
In other news: I am currently working on a photo journal of my route to work and will be posting it here either Tuesday or Wednesday, so GET EXCITED! I walk to work every morning (it takes about fifteen or twenty minutes.) (Once I made it in nine minutes because I woke up twenty minutes before I was supposed to be there and so I had to sprint to make it to a class on time. I was impressed with myself, actually.) Anyway, I pass some pretty weird shops on the way to work. So you all should be seriously CHECKING YOUR COMPUTERS EVERY FIVE MINUTES next Tuesday and Wednesday because, well, it will be pretty cool.
Anyway, what with all of this walking to work every day and climbing flights of stairs to the apartment (the building has no elevator) and of course, hiking around Paris every day of the weekend, my legs are going to be SUPER TONED and fit when I get back. (Wishful thinking. Maybe if I say it enough times, it’ll come true!)
Ohh, here’s another one of those cultural difference things, though! You know how in America, when we say the first floor, it’s the one that you walk into, and the second floor is the one right above it, etc., etc? Well, apparently in the rest of the world, the first floor is actually the GROUND FLOOR, and the one above that, the one that we call the second floor, is called the first floor. You might not think that this is so big of a difference, but AU CONTRAIRE, my friends! There are two areas in which this makes a very big difference, and they are the following:
1. When you are trying to locate somebody’s office. I’ll let you guess at the number of times I’ve screwed that one up.
2. When you are walking up to your apartment on the “third” (BUT ACTUALLY THE FOURTH) floor after a difficult and very tiring day of work. That extra flight of stairs can really get to you.
3. When you are arriving at your apartment for the first time and have to drag two massive suitcases up the flights of stairs. Again, that extra flight makes a huge difference!!!
Ahh, my friends, never fear. It is good for my quads.
So, what else is there to talk about? There is some WICKED shopping to be done here at the moment because, true to their leftist tendencies, the French only have sales TWICE A YEAR, and EVERY RETAIL STORE MUST PARTICIPATE. And guess when the sales are? Oh, that’s right. June 23 to August 2. What is that? Are those almost the EXACT dates that I’m here? I think so!!!
Anyway, even though many things are ridiculously overpriced, I still manage to find some SWEEET stuff on sale. No, I won’t elaborate further. Why? Well, dear reader, because then various members of my family may or may not figure out what I have bought for them as gifts (no gifts for anybody outside the immediate family unless you specifically asked me for something before I left, sorry!)
Well, dear readers, I have many many more things to say to you, but I feel that it is best if I cut this update here, give you a few days to digest it, and post the next installment (ALONG WITH MY PHOTO JOURNAL SOON SOON KEEP SENDING EMAILS AND REMINDING ME AND BUGGING ME ABOUT IT SO THAT I ACTUALLY DO IT!!!)
Again, if you read this post and/or appreciated it/have some comment to make...PLEASE EMAIL ME AND TELL ME SO!
Thanks,
I miss you all!
Ailea
Friday, 04 July 2008
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I Am Alive! And in Paris!!
WARNING: This is an excessively long post to make up for my silence. It will take you a long time to read. You might not want to try to read it all in one go. It is indicative of my rambling personality and of little value to most of the world and certainly lacking possession of any literally merit whatsoever. Plus, it is really long. Really, really long. So, without further ado…
Hello, everybody! Wow, it’s been a really long time. Well, not too long, but relatively. A week and a half, yes? It seems like longer than that, and shorter at the same time. It’s pretty weird how that happens, huh?
So, where to begin? I left Kansas City at precisely 1:35 pm on Saturday, June 21st. I spend the entire flight to Dallas reading Me Talk Pretty One Day, by David Sedaris. I continued reading it during my layover and finished it on the flight to Paris.
I don’t know if you’ve all read that book, but it has about three chapters devoted to the writer’s years in Paris, his awkward and terrible attempts at French, and the French people’s scorn and contempt of all foreigners, especially Americans, especially those who don’t speak French well.
…and I was reading this book on my flight to Paris. Where I’m beginning my first real job. And I haven’t spoken French in months, thanks in part to my lazy streak and in part to those wanna-be professors on the College Board who plan APs at very inopportune times. (Yes, I will always find a way to blame my problems on the College Board. It will always be their fault. Always.)
So, needless to say, I was more than a little nervous. It also didn’t help that I had a corpulent middle-aged Texan in the aisle seat next to my window seat. At first, when he sat down, I thought, “Oh, God, what am I getting into? He will probably fall asleep and snore and drool and have bad breath and turn the air conditioner up too high and I will freeze because I always freeze on planes but he will just make it worse and when I get to Paris I will have both residual goosebumps from being frozen but also pit stains from being so nervous Oh God did I pack deodorant in my carry-on to battle the pit stains?” Yes, all my thoughts are run-on sentences and tend to resemble James Joyce’s. Or perhaps The Sound and the Fury might be more accurate, since part of the time it’s narrated by a crazy person. Not that I would ever dare compare my inner thoughts to great literary works. It’s just that they’re very, well, confusing. And they digress a lot.
Speaking of which…
The Texan turned out to be pretty cool, even though we never exchanged one word. But he ordered Perrier to drink, and he was reading a book on marriage that was by an interracial couple, (MAJOR points in his favor) and ALSO, he complained that the plane was too cold and asked the stewardess if she could turn down the air or something. So this guy basically rocked. As a gesture of my goodwill towards him, I strategically timed my bathroom breaks to be at the same time as his (as soon as he got up to go the bathroom in the front of the plane, for example, I would race to the back of the plane, do my business very quickly, and then race back to my seat before he got back.) so that he wouldn’t have to get up every time I needed to go. I like to think that my gesture was appreciated.
Anyway, so I got off the plane at 9:40 am on Sunday, June 22nd (Paris time.) I met the person who was supposed to pick me up at the airport and immediately panicked because she was speaking French, of course, and I could barely understand her. During the drive to the apartment, I learned that she was Laotian and therefore had a Laotian accent to her French. I immediately felt better.
Anyway, she dropped my off at the apartment where I’m staying (for all of you who want to know, as many of you so desperately do, it’s in the 3rd arrondissement, also known as Le Marais. Picasso spent a lot of time there. So do gay people—more on that later.)
So I arrived and immediately met Barbara, the woman in whose apartment I am currently living. She’s leaving (for BALI) on vacation soon, but for those of you who are raising your eyebrows right now and skeptically saying, “You’ll be living alone?” (And you’re right; if I live alone I’ll probably wind up living on bread, apples and other delicious fruits, rice, and the occasional dark chocolate bar with almonds. A most nutritious diet, of course.) Anyway, for those of you who are raising your eyebrows with skepticism, fear not! For there is Steve! Steve is one of Barbara’s friends from Boston who can pretty much work from anywhere as long as he has his computer and a decent Internet connection, so he’s chosen to stay in Paris for a few months. Anyway, he’s living here in the apartment as well; his wife is somewhere in Eastern Europe at the moment, but she will be joining us as soon as she finishes visiting all of her mafia contacts. (There are no mafia contacts; I just made that up.) So Steve is here to make sure that I don’t die of anti-scurvy, if that’s even possible.
Although he is a vegetarian, so maybe we’ll both end up dying of anti-scurvy after all.
ANYWAY…
So I am working in an office that hires out teachers to teach business English to French businesspeople. Already I have had many, many, MANY lessons. There are essentially four types of lessons that we offer, and they are the following:
INDIVIDUAL
It’s pretty self-explanatory. The teacher (in this case, me) goes to the student’s office once a week for an hour and makes them do listening comprehension exercises, read articles, learn grammar, build vocabulary, etc. It’s basically just your normal English class. For an hour.
GROUP
The same as individual, only with more people.
TELEPHONE
Also the same as individual…only (wait for it; waaaait for it) on the telephone.
INTENSIVE
The student comes to our office for eight hours a day for an entire business week (five days) and learns English in two four-hour sessions a day, from 9 am to 1 pm, and then from 2 pm to 6 pm. That’s FORTY HOURS of ENGLISH CLASS in FIVE DAYS. It’s pretty much my idea of my own personal…well, you know. The opposite of heaven. And these people do it voluntarily. Usually just to “brush up” on their English before traveling somewhere where they’ll have to use it. Like Poland. (I taught an intensive last week where the woman was going to Poland to do audits. In English. Which is apparently the lingua franca of the business world; who knew?)
Anyway, my job pretty much rocks. Even if coming up with enough material to keep a student interested for four hours is a little difficult.
The best part is, having just been a student myself, I get to revel in the fact that I am now the one to cause them pain, and not the other way around. The student has now become the teacher…ha! I was giving evaluations the other day (when we assess the student’s level to decide what kind of material/classes we should give them) and there’s a section on there that is pretty much like a normal oral language exam at Pembroke—we give them a topic, usually something about their job, and then they have two minutes to prepare and after that, they have to talk for three minutes.
All those who were with me in Spanish class will say, “Oh, that’s pretty much normal.” All those who were with my in AP French will say, “Oh, that? In my language class, we had to talk about a series of six pictures plus two other questions for five minutes, and we only had a minute and a half to prepare.” Which is totally true. Although it sounds strangely like the dear old “Back in my day…” refrain.
Moving on. I get such sadistic pleasure out of seeing these businessmen squirm. Because a lot of them work in insurance or actuaries or something and always get to inflict pain upon people.
No, that’s a terrible, terrible lie. They’re all very sweet people (at least, the ones that I’ve had so far,) and I’m a horrible person for enjoying their anguish.
It’s just that, well, I was there not so very long ago, and I survived and look! Now I am happy and content in the job of my dreams! But I worked hard and went through a lot more agony than they are right now in my language classes, let me tell you.
But again, I digress. I’m supposed to be talking about my time in Paris, not exploring the possibly sadistic tendencies of my innermost psyche.
Here are a few observations about Paris that I have made:
1. French keyboards are very different from American ones. This means that when I’m at the office, the Q and A are switched, as are the W and the Z. The punctuation is all shifted around and messed up, and the M is where the semicolon is supposed to be. (The semicolon, on the other hand, is somewhere around where the greater than and less than signs used to live.) Also, you have to press shift to type all of the numbers because all of the letters with accents are in the normal number-spots, as are a few random punctuation marks, such as the hyphen. Also, where the semicolon is supposed to be, there is some weird û mark.
Anyway, now that I’m just getting used to the weird freakish French keyboards, I come home to type on MY computer and my fingers get all confused. So sorry if I accidentally end up typing Qilea instead of Ailea. It’s not my fault. It’s the College Board’s.2. Which brings me to my next point: the French cannot pronounce my name correctly. Not even to save their lives. Not even to save someone else’s life. Not even to save a baby’s life. Not even to save baby Jesus’s life. Well, maybe for that. Seriously though, it is worse than in the US. Everybody, and when I say everybody I mean every single French person that I have met in Paris is physically unable to pronounce my name. They put the emphasis on the wrong syllable. They say Ay-lea instead of I-lea. They even add consonants that are not there in the first place, such as D. So far, I have known only one person here who can say my name the right way, and that was after five solid minutes of tutorial. Plus, he was Spanish to begin with and spoke five different languages (Spanish, Catalan, French, English, and Hebrew.) So he doesn’t really count. I repeat, the French cannot pronounce my name to save their lives. (Added later: I have now met TWO people here who can pronounce my name. One is the person described above. The other is Indian—I don’t know what region he’s from, so let’s say for our purposes that his first language is Hindi. The important thing here is that it’s not French—lived in Atlanta for a month, and now speaks fluent French. And he only got it after several repetitions, corrections, and spelling lessons.)
3. I somehow have ended up in the Gayest Neighborhood in Paris. You think that this is just youthful exaggeration? That in my adolescent enthusiasm there is an innate tendency to exaggerate? You may be right. However, after attending a gay pride parade last weekend (which was pretty much awesome to watch but actually a little frightening if you stayed there for more than about twenty minutes) I found that all of the people there came to my neighborhood afterward to celebrate. Also, once I told that story to one of my friends at the office, she said, “Well, where do you live?” And so I told her. And she said, “Yeah, that’s kind of known as the gayest neighborhood in Paris.” Which, when you think about it, is kind of impressive because, well, it’s Paris. Anyway, this experience is quite good for me, I think. Eye-opening, in a way. And I feel very safe walking around at night because nobody here is interested in me. It is strangely liberating.
4. The French have terrible, terrible, terrible double standards when it comes to speaking a language. All of the people that I teach think that their English is terrible even if it’s pretty much perfect. However, my French, which is nowhere near as good as their English, they call excellent and almost perfect. When I protest that I have an accent, they tell me that it’s normal and not to worry about it, even though when I speak everybody can immediately tell that I am an Anglophone. It is unfair, I tell you. Unfair.
5. Which brings me, again, to my next point (are these actually in some kind of logical order? Wow!) French guys, much like American guys and American girls, love accents. Especially English ones. Especially when the speaker (in this case, me) speaks some semblance of good French, or at least continues to endeavor to speak French even when somebody talks to her in English, which is incredibly annoying since she came to Paris in part to improve her French and what’s the point if everybody talks to her in English? Hypothetically, of course. Did that make sense? I didn’t think so. To briefly sum up, then: the English accent is irresistible and cute.
6. Everybody smokes. Everybody drinks. When I tell people that I don’t smoke, they say “Really? Well, good for you! Smoking kills, you know. It’s really bad for you.” And then they proceed to light up and chain smoke for the rest of the evening. With drinking, they’re a little more skeptical, mostly because it’s just a part of the culture here. “Really? You never drink alcohol? What about champagne at a party? NO? What do you mean, it’s illegal in the United States? You’re in France now! It’s not illegal here! But your parents aren’t here either, so it shouldn’t matter, right? Well, if you insist…Waiter, she’ll have a Coke.” Or something to that effect.
7. You know that joke about how in Texas, there’s a church on every corner? Well here, there are cafés on every corner. Yes, cafés, plural. There are at least, at least two per block. And even that’s unusual. It could be a bar. It could be a Moroccan restaurant. It could be a little lunch place. It could be a bistro. Or it could be just a tiny restaurant with a bar in front and four tables in the back. You never know. But they are everywhere. And it rocks.
8. People walk very quickly. Enough said.
9. There are a lot of interracial couples and/or friendships. I’ve almost become desensitized—almost. However, when I described my ethnicity to one of my colleagues, she was all surprised, so maybe I’ve just been hanging out in liberal neighborhoods. (Since I live like, two blocks from the Centre Pompidou, which is something like the biggest modern art museum in the world or something, this assumption is not too far off the mark. Seriously, do a Google Image Search of the Centre Pompidou, and you’ll see what I mean. Even the building itself looks like a modern art sculpture.)
10. The metro is the greatest invention. Ever. For just fifty-five euro a month I can go wherever I want to in Paris as often as I want to from something like five am to one am. (If you do the math, that’s way less than I’d be spending on gas if I were to drive around Paris instead. Actually, I don’t know if that’s true. I’m going to assume that it is.) It’s amazing. It’s ridiculous. It is, again, the greatest invention ever.
11. People here stay up really, really late. I was talking to somebody on like, a Tuesday night and they were like, “I get off work at eleven; what will you be doing then?” So I said, “Probably about to go to sleep…” and they were all SURPRISED. I was like, “It’s a TUESDAY NIGHT. I’m sorry that I have work in the morning and I want to get eight hours of sleep!”
12. The grocery store is separate from the fruit and vegetable market. Which is separate from the bakery, which is separate from the butcher, which is separate from the poissonnerie (seafood market), which is separate from the fromagerie (cheese) which is separate from…well, you get the idea. To give you an example, here is my grocery list from a few days ago.
a. Fromage blanc (it’s a white cheese kind of like yogurt that I like to have for breakfast).
b. Apricot jam
c. Avocados
d. Baguette(s?)
e. Chocolate
f. Goat cheese
Only seven items, right? Guess how many stores I had to go to in order to find all seven of those items? Three. Ohhh, yes. Luckily, I found the goat cheese at the grocery store/regular market place thing, so I didn’t have to specially go to a fromagerie to get it. But I went to the fruits and vegetables market (conveniently placed right next to the grocery store) to get the avocados and the bakery (also conveniently placed down the block from the fruits and vegetables market) to get the baguettes. In a way, it’s nice—you know that you’re getting good quality stuff because it’s the specialty of the places that you’re getting it.
Well, that’s all for now. This is already excessively long. I promise that there won’t be such a delay between this and my next post. But, just to reiterate, I love Paris. I absolutely love it. I don’t want to leave.
But I miss you all terribly, and the winds of home shall inevitably pull me westward.
Oh, and happy Fourth of July!!!
Love,
Me!
Friday, 20 June 2008
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I Leave in Two Days...
...and I haven't packed yet.
Sound familiar?
That's right, any of you who were ever in any class with me know how this refrain goes:Me: "Hey, (insert name of classmate here), ask me if I've done (insert name of assignment here)!
Classmate: "Have you—"
Me: "NO!"Any teachers reading this will groan and shake their heads and wonder how I ever survived their class. My only answer is this (and somewhere out there, Dr. Loeb cringes because I have just used "this" without some sort of noun after it...): A love of the subject, O my esteemed instructors. A love of the subject.
In other news, my most pressing concern up to this point (other than getting my visa, thus making it legal for me to enter the country) has been what to wear. Oh, yes, underneath all of the silliness, I really am just your typical teenage girl.
But seriously, it is an issue. I mean, it's enough of a struggle to figure out what I would wear to my first day of work in the United States, my native country, where I know all of the fashions and connotations of certain styles and acceptable color combinations. But France? Seriously, this is the country that's produced some of the most revolutionary (and, I'll admit it, also hideous) fashions ever. According to my resident French expert (read: one of my best friend's moms) they are at least two years ahead of the U.S. in fashion.
My French correspondents (read: my boss and the lady that I'm staying with) have told me that I should look "professional without going too far to one extreme or the other." It's good, sound advice; however, I was perhaps looking for something a tad more specific. Something like, "You should go to Banana Republic and get a dark brown straight skirt. Do not get an A-line skirt. It is unprofessional and means, in French society, that you have a strange penchant for cheap, unripened cheese. Pinstripes are optional." You know, something to that effect. Obviously, nobody gets THAT specific when giving instructions, and frankly, who actually has the time?
...so I'm pretty much done for.
For the last week or so, I have been frantically running around clothing stores throughout the spectrum, from the J.C. Penney outlet store to Brooks Brothers, trying to find basic work clothing. You know, clothing that is classic and always in fashion. (For the record, yes, I do have a dark brown straight skirt from Banana Republic. I'm wearing it on my first day, along with a white short-sleeved button down blouse from Target and...but you really don't need to know all that.) Finally, I feel as if I have all of the basic items needed for a professional wardrobe. No, I won't bore you with all of the gory details (unless you email me and ask for the full list) but rest assured, dear readers, I am prepared. I am ready for the professional world! In stunning outfits!
Anyway, it's midnight now, and if I want to finish (start?) packing in the morning, I need my full eight hours. So with the Saga of What to Wear at its close, I shall leave you.
To be continued...
-Ailea
Sunday, 15 June 2008
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Here We Go...!
Okay, so it's been a while (as in, I last posted sometime in 2007...) since I've posted on here. Facebook has pretty much taken over the whole social networking aspect, and as for the blogging, well, I'm largely angst-free at the moment. Plus, did anybody really want to listen to me anyway?
...I thought not.
However, I AM leaving for Paris in five days, fourteen hours, and fifty-four minutes (but who's counting?) and I figured this would be a pretty good way to keep all of my friends updated on how my life is going. That way, not everybody has to bother with those tedious emails, letters, the occasional phone call, etc. This is much easier.
So here it is: This is the beginning of Ailea's Paris Blog of Summer 2008. Here you will find all of my thoughts, observations, witty social commentaries (ha!), complaints, brief love affairs with Parisian cuisine, etc. Feel free to email me at any time throughout the journey at CileeRox12@aol.com. If I recognize your name/email address or you don't seem like a creepy stalker, I will definitely email you back. (However, please make the subject line something to the effect of the following: Response to Paris Blog, Hey Ailea It's [insert name of friend here], etc. so I don't get super creeped out and delete your email and block you from ever sending me mail again.)
If you don't have a xanga, you won't be able to add comments on here, so again, PLEASE email me if you have ANYTHING AT ALL to say about ANY ENTRY I might have, no matter how old it is. I like talking to people, and I have random bouts of insomnia at odd moments, so really, I will enjoy hearing from you.
So here we go. I'll probably post tomorrow with something or other about my visa application or packing or something to that effect.
Over and out,
AileaP.S. Please, please, PLEASE disregard anything written before this date. In fact, don't read it. I'm serious. It is terrible. It is like logorrhea. My only defense is that I was an angsty fourteen-year-old who thought she was a rebel and that her parents didn't understand her.
Tuesday, 28 August 2007
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It's Been A While...
Whew. Sorry, it's been an INCREDIBLY long time. However, facebook has pretty much taken over my blog life. Plus, I've just found that the people that I care about will listen to me face to face, and the people whom I wish that I could influence (politicians, the government, certain teachers, the American people in general...) don't really want to read the blog of a teenage girl. Funny how that works.
If ever that should change, however, rest assured that I will be back up here in mere nanoseconds.
Until then,
-Autumn.

