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Rome & Pompeii Saturday, 28 April, 2007

Posted by paperdoll in places.
6 comments

So the plan to finish the last paper by tonight fell through. (Like I have nothing to do with it, eh?) I went for a run in the late afternoon and then went grocery shopping for the third time this week and then cooked dinner and then had dinner and then watched The Island (what a disappointing ending) and then hand-washed my running gear and then packed for my weekend trip (I’m going away for a petit vacance this weekend, I am) and am now talking to Shu and typing this too, so SCREW IT. I will have a slight panic attack on Sunday evening and finish the paper then.

Now then. Shall we get on with mes vacances?

First stop: Rome.

Day 1: After a morning of classes and an early afternoon of mad last-minute things, met Hui at the CDG airport. She brought with her slices of chocolate-and-pear cake that Celine had made, which was yum. Boarded our Air France flight, yakked away and captured a picture (naughtily) of a man sleeping with his mouth opened- it was a hilarious sight and begged to be captured. Arrived in Rome and took the train from the airport to the termini station, from which we walked to our hostel. Bought the yummiest thin-crust pizza nearby and ate them hot and crispy. Fell into bed for much wanted sleep.

Day 2: Got up, got ready, got out. For our guided tour of the Vatican Museums that we’d booked on viator.com . Entered the Vatican Museums after a spot of walking with our rather big tour group. The museums were FILLED with amazing things to see. Everywhere one turned. Man. Statues of men, to begin with. In styles both classic and hellenistic (the more muscular of the two). And painting after painting, in frames, on tapestry, on the walls, on the ceilings. It was insane. Our guide, a British who spoke fluent Italian (we heard her go off in Italian to the security guards and to her fellow guide) was excellent. Learnt a lot from her and it was all so interesting. Particularly about Michelangelo and how he didn’t really want to paint the Sistine Chapel, and how he suffered for it because it was fresco painting (wet plaster- think about it) and how he added impish touches to the added painting on the wall. The Sistine Chapel was the highlight of the Vatican Museums for me. There’s just something about standing in it and looking above you and around you and feeling complete awe. Sent a postcard to the brother from the Vatican City post office, which was pretty cool. Emerged into the sun, had delicious gelato at Old Bridge Gelateria quite near the entrance of the Vatican Museums. Checked into our next hostel, after which we did some grocery shopping, went back to our previous hostel to grab our stuff and finally made it back to the new hostel to settle in for the night, only to realize that we were now in a place which shared a courtyard with a club. So the music thumped through the weekend nights (and mornings) and I realized to my surprise and delight (in equal parts) that I could sleep through it all with nary a stir.

Day 3: Awoke early to go to Galleria Borghese by myself. Had to walk through the park to go to it and it was so beautiful and peaceful that time of the morning. The museum was wonderful, if only for the four Bernini marble sculptures. They were breathtaking. Really enjoyed Pluto and Proserpina. It looked like his fingers were sinking into her soft thigh. Imagine that. Since the museum only allowed a number of people to be in the museum in any 2-hour period, there was a long moment when I was alone in the room with Pluto and his prisoner. I really enjoyed that. Thereafter, I walked the park a little, and then hopped on a train to go to the Colosseum. Went in with a tour guide, who wasn’t very good, but being in the Colosseum was pretty great. Too many tourists, though… they kinda took away a little bit of the grandeur. After that, as an added bonus for paying for the Colosseum tour, there was a university student who served as a guide to the Palatino grounds. That was really interesting- the guy was knowledgeable and entertaining. After this second tour, I was pooped from listening+looking+walking, so I sat myself down on a flat rock in a grassy part of the grounds, and just basked in the sun. Met Hui after for a spot of dinner, and then we went back to thumping music and fitful sleep.

Day 4: Awoke (early again!) to catch our train to Naples, en route to Pompeii. Naples was a little dodgy, from what we saw at the train station, as well as out of the windows on the train to Pompeii from there. Glad we weren’t staying. Did you know Naples was where pizza was purportedly invented? Did you know too that I had the worst pizza I’d ever had there? ‘Tis true. Pompeii was wonderful. We were greeted by the biggest fattest juiciest lemons and oranges at the entrance to Pompeii and we couldn’t resist buying cups of them juices. With our thirsts quenched, we entered the ancient city. You know it’s well-preserved, but still, it amazes you. It was really something else. There was, for example, a room that had a near-complete mural. It was just wow. It was at the same time sad to think of the volcano eruption that ended off what appeared to be prosperous happy lives in Pompeii. There’s a sad sort of feeling hanging about there. Waiting for our train back to Naples, we got to rest our feet on an unused train track overgrown with grass and flowers while sitting on the platform enjoying the sun. Very cool indeed.

Day 5: Today, like Saturday, was our be-in-Rome-alone days. I walked and walked and walked. Nuts. This was a really hot sun-beat-down-on-one’s-back-mercilessly day, but boy was it a good change for a girl who was sick sick sick of the winter cold. So I walked everywhere! From Piazza Barberini where there was the Fontana del Tritone, I walked to the Spanish Steps, then the Tempio Adriano, the Pantheon, Fontana di Trevi (the best gelato there I ate while looking at the sparkling fountain water. After my feet were well-rested here, I walked past all the ruins leading to the Colosseum and took a train from the train station there to the other side of the river, where I then walked more than half (I kid you not) of the border of the Vatican City, to arrive at the Basilica S. Pietro, where the chairs for the Pope’s Easter Sunday Speech were still in the square. It was a beautiful sight, the square. Did my walking end here? Nope. I walked on past Castel Sant’ Angelo and Palazzo di Giustizia to (wrong direction but I was blissfully unaware, awed was I by all the sights that I was passing by) Piazza Navona and Campo de Fiori, before asking for directions (I had had enough of wandering around for the day and now wanted clear instructions for getting to a train station) to go to the nearest train station, which was Spagna. I walked back through Campo de Fiori, through Piazza Navona, then through narrow streets with short buildings and beautiful purple flowers, past Mausoleo Augusoto, where I should have turned right for Spagna but for some stupid reason did not, and so through Piazza del Popolo to finally reach the train station Flamingo. And here I gladly boarded a train and gladly took a seat and rested my dirty feet (was wearing my Havianas and the dirt had inevitably collected from my day’s worth of walking). Hui and I sat down to a nice pasta meal at a restaurant before heading back to pack and have a last chat with our nice room-mates (loved the two Canadians amongst them).

Day 6: I left early for my train bound for Florence.

A continuer! See you again after the weekend, my friends. I promise the rest of the story by the end of Tuesday night (my time). Plenty more to tell- Florence, Athens, Santorini and Prague. Goodnight for now. Am too sleepy to type anymore and I have to get up early for the drive to my weekend destination. Bon weekend!

Hot in Suspense Friday, 27 April, 2007

Posted by paperdoll in places, poo poo.
6 comments

It’s been hot hot hot in Paris, babyies. And I mean hot. Like Singapore hot. The day before yesterday, it was actually 32 degrees celcius in the afternoon. Imagine being in a classroom in this condition- windows shut (cars vrooming by drowning out the teacher’s voice), door closed (heels clack-clacking on the wooden flooring in the corridor), sans fans (what are those?), let alone air-conditioning (more heat?)- hot, stuffy, nearly fainted. The other days of the week, it hasn’t been much lower… usually peaking at 30 degrees. Mad. Was winter not only a few weeks ago? People are walking around in summer fashion, not spring. Although it has been nice for running; my nose does not drip and I actually sweat. I’ve missed you too, my short fbt shorts.

I know I promised detailed recounts of my fortnight away by yesterday/today, but there’ll be a slight postponement. How about tomorrow? I’m on my way to finishing my fourth paper of the week, which is no mean feat, I’ll tell ya. See you in a day with the stories then!

Spring Sunday, 22 April, 2007

Posted by paperdoll in prance.
2 comments

Am back- have been for a few days now. Am resting and working on papers. Would prefer to only rest, but that’s the way things go. And what’s there to complain about when Spring is here!

Spring spring spring. The weather is gorgeous and so is the city and so is my little town. Temperature’s in the low 20s, the skies are blue as can be with nary a cloud in sight, the trees are full of oily green leaves, the flowers are crazy in bloom. I love Spring! And outfits one can wear and will be wearing in Spring.

Really do have a lot of work to take care of at the moment, so will post on my fortnight away this Thursday and/or Friday, with accompanying pictures(:

White on Black Monday, 16 April, 2007

Posted by paperdoll in places, prance.
3 comments

It’s been not so great at some points in time, but all in all WOOHOO! Rome, Pompeii, Florence, Athens, Santorini, now Prague. Be back Paris in almost exactly two days. Will share with you my adventures then(: Take care, everyone.

A little teaser: guess who was tanning on the black Perissa beach in a white bikini? Herherher.

Traveling is exhilarating.

Exceptionnel Sunday, 8 April, 2007

Posted by paperdoll in people, places, poo poo, prance, pretty.
6 comments

Finalement, I have in my hands my carte de séjour.

The road to finally holding this residency permit in my hands has been a long and trying one. Of course, it also had to end with a are-you-kidding-me-give-it-to-me-already morning.

I give you the morning of 4 avril:

A) Take 7am bus to commissariat at edge of town. Registered. Told by policement that they do not sell the special 55-euro stamp (le timbre OMI). We have to go to the trésor publique to buy one. Fine.

B) ZY and I brave the very strong very cold winds to go to this trésor publique. About 20 minutes later, we arrive and this is, wait for it, the sign on the gate:

Fermerture Exceptionnel

4 avril (mercredi)

Murphy’s Law, darlings… Murphy’s Law. Itàs the system here in France, I hear.

C)Take bus, drop off at biggest post office near the town hall. Stamp is to post office what bread is to bakery, non? Non. Useful info attained nonetheless: tabacs sell them. Thus, with renewed hope,

D) Walk to train station, where there are 2 tabacs. Yes! They do sell them! But oh they have both run out. Ok breathe.

E) Take train to next town, Juvisy. Walk to trésor publique there and purchase the damned stamp.

F) Take train back to Savigny-sur-Orge. Catch bus to commissariat, have been passed over and so need to wait for everyone else to be done before seeing the one woman in the one-woman office and receiving with tired elation) yes it is possible to be elated in a tired manner) my carte at noon. Weeee!/pffft.

*

I am in Rome now, my carte de séjour safely in my bag. Rome has been overwhelming so far in its splendour. So far, I have been notably to the Vatican Museums, the Borghese Gallery, the Colosseum and the Palatino. I nearly cried in the Sistine Chapel looking up at the ceiling, but all the stories on Rome and the subsequent places I am going to will come properly later(:

I am on the timer now in an internet place run by Indians. All the internet places in Italy I have been to are run by Indians… it is a little odd but then not really.

The emails that have come my way, you may have to wait a little bit before a reply comes your way, but thank you for them(: Love mail.

 

 

Expose Your Feet! Wednesday, 4 April, 2007

Posted by paperdoll in people, places, prance.
1 comment so far

It’s becoming warmer! Unmistakably warmer! And the people of Paris are celebrating by discarding their heavy-duty duvet-like winter jackets. I love that the ladies are beginning to display their toes and their heels outdoors. It sounds kind of kinky, doesn’t it? Ha ha… it’s just that we can now wear open-toe sandals and sling-backs without the risk of freezing our feet off. It’s so liberating, Spring! I feel lighter without the burden of layer upon layer of clothing.

Speaking of feeling lighter, I do believe I’ve shed a good amount of the weight I’ve put on in the first half of my stay here, which is excellent news, is it not? Tonight, I successfully put on with pride two pairs of jeans that I’d had to let sit forlornly in the closet for a long time. Running is good for the mind and for the body woohoo! The park is just becoming more and more beautiful every time I go. I’ve still been eating my meals (how can I not? food’s too good to ration, let alone give up) and I’ve continued frequenting my local bakery for sablés and millefeuilles and Pierre Hermé for macarons and Starbucks for mi-cuit chocolats and other places for other sinful treats like that (because I can’t not have them… nonono they are too yummy and they call out to me, they do). C’est la modération, oui? Mo-de-ra-tion. Oh I must tell you about La Grande Epicerie de Paris. It’s at the basement of Le Bon Marché and it is food heaven. I’m half glad I hadn’t gone till recently because 1) I’d be broke from buying all the yummy things there and 2) I’d be a huge cow with no hope of ever fitting into the two pairs of jeans that I just fit into. (And of course I’m half not-glad because damn it’s such an amazing place with all these tempting food items that can make me glad.)

Anyway, things are not all bright and gay. I didn’t do that hot on my Savoir-Vivre paper… so I will have to study super hard for the test at the end of the semester. Crossing my fingers there. But that’s rather far away and we have other work to complete before then, so we will leave that for the time being, eh? I’m sure everything will turn out a-okay. Will make sure of it.

Have to also wake up bloody early tomorrow to get my carte de séjour. Finally, after 7 freaking months, I’m getting my residency permit. Seriously. I have to pay 55 euros for the work that went into the process, although I feel like I should get paid for all the work I put into getting it. Problem: I don’t know at the moment whether I’m supposed to buy this 55 euro “stamp” somewhere else before going to get my carte… I hope I can just pay at the commissariat while I’m getting it. Whyever not, right? Why is there still a problem at the very end? Weren’t there enough already?! ROAR. Will keep you updated on this.

Everything aside (Aside, everything! Aside!), I’m off again in less than two days. Will probably write up another post before leaving, so look out for it. It’s the Easter Vacation or les Vacances de Pâques. Two weeks! I’m off off off. Right before I typed this post out, I was scouting the internet to learn a few useful phrases in Italian, Greek and Czech. So now you know which countries I’m headed to(: