“Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness, and many of our people need it sorely on these accounts. Broad, wholesome, charitable views of men and things cannot be acquired by vegetating in one little corner of the earth all one’s lifetime.” ~ Mark Twain, The Innocents Abroad / Roughing It.
Je suis à Paris!
My Francais isn’t great, mais I’m trying. For photos and more details, check stories and posts in @waylonlewis.
I booked a $450 roundtrip direct flight ticket some months ago. I’m staying in a hostel. I’ve got friends visiting with me, but I’m staying on my own maintenant et having my own adventures.
Scroll through photos:
https://www.instagram.com/p/Bne5-A9hcGq/?taken-by=waylonlewis
I’ve walked 8 hours today, and at least 3 last night, my first night—and my legs feel it. But it’s been worth it. Paris is everything I thought it would be, and so much more, and so much different. Vive la difference. It seems to have protected its historic buildings, unlike most cities and towns in the US and around the world that have allowed their craftsmanship to be largely lost or degraded. We only have one chance to save the best of our past for our future immemorial. Craftsmanship is mindfulness, whether old or new.
Tourism is everywhere, here, of course, but it doesn’t seem to have succeeded in drowning the culture here, which is proud and powerful and vibrant.
This morning I woke, tired, did my meditation and calisthenic/yoga stuff, and walked off to meet my LA buddy Alex. We got breakfast (including my first Parisian coffee) at Seasons. Vegan boy here stuck to acai/muesli and bread avec jam in its own container (haven’t seen much plastic use, god bless, here).
We walked about Le Marais, and then I walked all over Paris until I was exhausted. Got home, changed out of sweaty clothes, and walked back to meet a new friend, Sara, at Shakespeare & Co. They don’t allow photos inside, and it’s a beautiful maze of cozy books and learning and history in there, including tea time with a charming elderly hostess and a sweet old cat they ask you to not disturb, since otherwise it’d get pet all day. I’d love to do a book reading there–if you’re inspired to help me read there, please email [email protected] (they gave me this email to use) and request that Waylon Lewis read Things I would like to do with You while he’s in Paris (I’m here through the end of Septembre).
I bought a book about Sylvia Beach, the founder lady, and got it stamped. It’s literally the center of Paris, that famous bookshop. The café next door is charming but does a lot of plastic-lined to-go cups, so Americain.
Then we walked the parks and cafe-ed it up and I walked back, another three hours total je pense. Given my sleepy jet lag and endless energy for this exciting City, I’m taking the night off—reading Sun Also Rises and the Sylvia livre—but I’ll continue to report back.
If you want more details and photos, see @waylonlewis.
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